Expands CISA education and training programs to community colleges and technical schools, focusing on cyber-relevant fields, including AI. Provides scholarships, internships, and service obligations. Requires participation in skills-based exercises and aims to enroll 10,000 students annually within ten years.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding federal statute enacted by the United States Congress with mandatory obligations, enforcement mechanisms, and legal penalties for non-compliance.
The document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains, with only implicit mention of AI system security (2.2) through cybersecurity training programs. The primary focus is on cybersecurity workforce development rather than AI-specific risks. Coverage is limited to security-related aspects through the lens of cyber training that includes AI as a cyber-relevant field.
The document primarily governs Educational Services through the establishment of cybersecurity training programs at community colleges and technical schools. It also has significant coverage of Public Administration (excluding National Security) and National Security through mandatory service obligations and internship placements in government cyber roles. The Act indirectly affects multiple sectors through internship placements with critical infrastructure owners and operators.
The document does not directly address specific AI lifecycle stages. It focuses on cybersecurity workforce development and training programs that include AI as one of several cyber-relevant fields. The coverage is indirect, relating to building human capacity to work with AI systems rather than governing AI development or deployment processes.
The document mentions AI only as one component of 'cyber-relevant' fields for workforce training purposes. It does not define or distinguish between different types of AI systems, models, or technical specifications. AI is treated as a subject area for education rather than a regulated technology.
United States Congress
This is a Congressional Act proposed and enacted by the United States Congress, as indicated by the legislative format and structure.
Department of Homeland Security; Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA); CISA Director; Secretary of Homeland Security; Participating institutions
The Director of CISA and the Secretary of Homeland Security are designated as the primary enforcement authorities, with participating institutions responsible for monitoring compliance.
CISA Director; Participating institutions; Committee on Homeland Security of the House of Representatives; Committee on Homeland Security and Government Affairs of the Senate
Participating institutions are required to monitor student compliance, while Congressional committees receive briefings and reports on program implementation and enrollment goals.
Community colleges; Technical schools; Students enrolled in cyber or cyber-relevant programs; Federal employees; State, local, Tribal, or territorial government entities; Critical infrastructure owners and operators
The Act targets students pursuing cyber and cyber-relevant education (including AI) at community colleges and technical schools, as well as government entities and critical infrastructure operators who will employ these students.
2 subdomains (2 Minimal)