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USA Today has published articles about AllSides' work, including:
USA Today has also published op-eds written by AllSides staff, including:
- Here's how technology can help reduce political polarization (Jan. 2020, CEO John Gable and Head Editor Henry A. Brechter)
- Political incivility is at crisis point in America. Here's how we can fix it (Nov. 2020, Brechter and COO Stephanie Bond).
- What Bruce Springsteen's Super Bowl ad gets right about reuniting Americans in 'the middle (Feb. 2021, Brechter)
Massachusetts law requires police to collect data about drivers for traffic stops that end in a written warning or citation. Police are not required to collect data on drivers they give verbal warnings – which police leaders estimate happen in four out of 10 stops.
When police officers write a citation, they must record basic information about the stop, including their perception of the driver’s race. Police can choose from six options set by the state: White, Black, Hispanic, Asian, Middle Eastern or American Indian/Alaska Native. While Hispanic is widely considered an ethnicity, not a race, it is the option intended for them. This information is regularly used by defense attorneys and researchers to probe patterns of potential bias.
The USA TODAY Network found that in 57 cities and towns, like Saugus – a predominantly white Boston suburb – police marked the majority of men with Hispanic surnames as white on traffic tickets.