Emerging Technology

Americans Would Trust AI More if Policies Ensuring Fairness Were Implemented. Here are Ten Ways to Start.

06.08.26 | 4 min read | Text by Clara Langevin & Caroline Siegel Singh & Oliver Stephenson & David W. Jacobs

By now, you’ve probably heard that most Americans do not trust AI. This distrust is especially concerning given how deeply these systems are already shaping access to healthcare, education, housing, jobs, and public benefits. Too often, these decisions happen without transparency, oversight, or meaningful avenues for recourse. At the same time, confidence in both technology companies and government institutions to manage AI responsibly remains low.

The stakes are clear, and the policy choices we make today will make or break society’s view of AI. We are currently at a critical opportunity to shape how AI is governed before harmful practices and inequities become further entrenched. To meet this moment, the Federation of American Scientists, with the support of the Kapor Foundation, launched a policy sprint, which is an intensive, time-bound effort designed to tackle complex challenges quickly and collaboratively. Policy sprints bring together experts from across disciplines, from academics, technologists, advocates, and practitioners, to develop practical, actionable solutions.

For our SOURCE CODE  AI Trust and Fairness Sprint, we’ve developed  10 memos with  leading experts that are detailed, implementable policy solutions. We have delved into why fairness is so hard to define and implement, and what is needed to promote public trust in our essay that frames this new policy agenda. These memos are not exhaustive; we know the landscape of challenges and potential solutions is far broader. Instead, we offer them as a starting point: ideas that we hope will not only serve as smart and actionable tools for policymakers, but also inspire the community to build out and advance new, detailed approaches.

To structure our policy agenda, we have considered how these ideas have employed targeted mechanisms, which we call policy levers, to ensure legitimate use, fair outcomes, and public trust in AI. These levers include government use of AI, public engagement, sectoral considerations, and redress in legal remedies; many of our policy ideas use several of them.

Policy LeverWhat it could doMemoAuthor/s
Government use and procurementBuilds safeguards into adoption, contracting, and oversightHow State Governments Should Purchase AI to Ensure Fair, Transparent, and Accountable UseJae Yeon Kim and Aniket Kesari
A Guide for State Leaders Implementing AINicole Ozer and Brady Hirsch
Prioritize Student Safety in K-12 Education By Establishing AI Procurement GuardrailsJ.B. Branch
The Federal Government Should Pilot a Decision Subject Representative Program for AI Systems Inspired by the FDAAnna Lenhart
How to Safely Bring AI into Law Enforcement AI-Generated Police ReportsJon M. Peha
Public participationGives affected communities a role before and after deploymentThe Federal Government Should Pilot a Decision Subject Representative Program for AI Systems Inspired by the FDAAnna Lenhart
Community Benefit Agreements (CBAs) in Data Center Development: A Framework for Protecting Communities through the AI-fueled Data Center ExpansionLiza Paudel
FairCare Verification Offers a Human-Centered Path for AI in MedicaidY. Tony Yang
A Guide for State Leaders Implementing AINicole Ozer and Brady Hirsch
Making Rural Communities Visible in Artificial Intelligence Through Rural Proofing in Kansas and BeyondZiwei Qi, Tatiana Lin, and Ayokunle Olagoke
Sector-specific safeguardsTailors rules to healthcare, education, labor, law enforcement, and rural systemsFairCare Verification Offers a Human-Centered Path for AI in MedicaidY. Tony Yang
Move Algorithmic-Driven Pay and Scheduling Systems From Surveillance Pay to Fair WagesWilneida Negrón
How to Safely Bring AI into Law Enforcement AI-Generated Police ReportsJon M. Peha
Making Rural Communities Visible in Artificial Intelligence Through Rural Proofing in Kansas and BeyondZiwei Qi, Tatiana Lin, and Ayokunle Olagoke
Prioritize Student Safety in K-12 Education By Establishing AI Procurement GuardrailsJ.B. Branch
Redress and remediesMakes harms contestable and structurally correctableBig Tech Settlement Wins Should Underwrite Digital Resilience FundsGaurav Laroia and Charlotte Slaiman
Community Benefit Agreements (CBAs) in Data Center Development: A Framework for Protecting Communities through the AI-fueled Data Center ExpansionLiza Paudel

This work was shaped by a multidisciplinary advisory working group of 17 experts from academia, civil rights organizations, think tanks, and beyond. Their insights helped refine the project’s focus, identify the most pressing policy opportunities, and strengthen each memo through expert review. Advisory members provided input in an individual capacity; their participation does not imply endorsement of the findings or recommendations. We are grateful for their support and expertise throughout this process.

The ideas generated through this sprint are practical, actionable, and grounded in existing authority. They demonstrate that policymakers already have many of the tools needed to govern AI effectively; they simply need to be deployed with urgency and intention. There is a narrowing window to shape the integration of AI systems into society. With thoughtful policy action, it is still possible to build systems that are fair, transparent, and accountable, and to earn the public trust that will ultimately determine AI’s future. We hope policymakers are ready to act.