Requires the Secretary of Homeland Security to conduct listening sessions with various organizations on AI use by federal agencies. Encourages similar sessions by these entities. Mandates annual reports to Congress on public opinions about federal AI adoption.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative bill with mandatory obligations on the Secretary of Homeland Security to conduct listening sessions and submit annual reports to Congress, using mandatory language throughout.
This document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains. It primarily addresses governance mechanisms (6.5) through citizen engagement requirements, with implicit minimal coverage of discrimination concerns (1.1) through inclusion of civil rights organizations. The document focuses on procedural governance rather than substantive risk mitigation.
This document governs Public Administration (excluding National Security) as it regulates Federal civilian agency use of AI through mandatory citizen engagement processes. The listening sessions include stakeholders from multiple sectors (agriculture, education, etc.), but these are consulted parties rather than governed entities.
The document does not focus on specific AI lifecycle stages but rather on governance processes for citizen engagement regarding federal AI use. It addresses consultation and reporting mechanisms that could inform planning and design decisions, but does not explicitly govern technical development stages.
The document uses the general term 'artificial intelligence' without defining it or specifying particular types of AI systems, models, or technical characteristics. No compute thresholds, model types, or technical specifications are mentioned.
United States Congress
The document is explicitly identified as a bill enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, making Congress the proposer.
United States Congress
Congress serves as the enforcement body through its oversight function, receiving annual reports from the Secretary of Homeland Security on compliance with the listening session and reporting requirements.
Secretary of Homeland Security; United States Congress
The Secretary of Homeland Security monitors public attitudes through listening sessions and reports findings to Congress annually. Congress monitors implementation through receipt of these reports.
Federal civilian agencies; Secretary of Homeland Security
The document targets Federal civilian agency use of artificial intelligence and places obligations on the Secretary of Homeland Security to conduct listening sessions and report on public attitudes regarding federal AI adoption.
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