Establishes the Chief AI Officers Council to promote and coordinate AI innovation and risk management. Requires each agency to appoint a CAIO responsible for developing and implementing AI strategies.
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 authority over federal agencies.
The document has minimal to good coverage of approximately 6-8 subdomains, with primary focus on governance failure (6.5), competitive dynamics (6.4), lack of transparency (7.4), and unfair discrimination (1.1). Coverage is concentrated in governance structures, oversight mechanisms, and risk management processes rather than specific technical AI risks.
This document governs AI use exclusively within the U.S. federal government across all agencies. It establishes governance structures for Public Administration (excluding National Security) as the primary sector, with implicit coverage of National Security through inclusion of all federal agencies.
The document comprehensively covers all AI lifecycle stages from planning through monitoring. It emphasizes governance structures across the entire lifecycle, with particular focus on deployment oversight, operational monitoring, and verification/validation through risk management and auditing processes.
The document uses the broad term 'artificial intelligence' as defined in the National Artificial Intelligence Initiative Act of 2020, referring to AI systems and technologies generally. It does not distinguish between different types of AI (frontier, general purpose, task-specific, generative, predictive) or mention foundation models, open-weight models, or compute thresholds.
United States Congress
This is a Congressional Act proposed and enacted by the United States Congress, as indicated by the legislative format and structure.
Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), Chief Artificial Intelligence Officers Council, Comptroller General of the United States (GAO), relevant congressional committees (Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of the Senate and the Committee on Oversight and Accountability of the House of Representatives)
The Director of OMB has primary enforcement authority through guidance issuance and Council oversight. GAO provides monitoring and assessment. Congressional committees provide oversight.
Chief Artificial Intelligence Officers Council, Comptroller General of the United States (GAO), Chief Artificial Intelligence Officers at each agency, Artificial Intelligence Coordination Boards
The Council oversees compliance and monitors AI use across government. GAO conducts assessments and submits reports. Agency CAIOs and Coordination Boards monitor agency-specific AI implementation.
Federal agencies as defined in section 3502 of title 44, United States Code; agencies described in section 901(b) of title 31, United States Code
The Act applies to federal agencies that develop, acquire, and deploy AI systems. These agencies are both governance actors (government entities) and AI deployers (entities using AI systems in operations).
11 subdomains (1 Good, 10 Minimal)