04/01/2026
Julie!
Julie Eshleman, a Georgia LEND Fellow, explains in that the proposed AI Civil Rights Act of 2025 would set guardrails around how AI is used. It would require bias checks, make sure people can ask for a human review, and allow individuals to take legal action if they are harmed.
But these rules alone are not enough.
To make digital tools fair for everyone, we also need to include disabled people in designing AI, make sure insurance and Medicaid cover AI powered assistive tech, and improve internet access for all communities.
Civil rights in the 21st century must include the right to an unbiased, accessible digital world, Julie writes.
📣 Get involved by asking how AI is used in decisions that affect you, pushing for transparency, and supporting policies that promote true inclusion.
Read full blog post: https://bit.ly/4djhp30
Center for Leadership in Disability
The People of Georgia LEND
ID: Split graphic with a blue left panel and a portrait on the right. The left panel reads “AUCD Policy Talk” and includes a quote: “The very features that make AI powered assistive technologies beneficial, its ability to personalize and adapt, are also the sources of its greatest risks.” — Julie Eshleman. The bottom text reads “Safe and Fair AI.” The right side shows Julie Eshelman, a professionally dressed person with long hair featuring pink highlights, wearing glasses and a dark blazer against a neutral indoor background.