Requires the Office of Management and Budget to issue guidance on using AI and technology for retrospective regulatory reviews. Mandates agencies to submit and implement plans for reviewing regulations using this guidance, identifying obsolete or burdensome regulations.
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 on federal agencies, enforceable through administrative oversight mechanisms.
This document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains. It primarily addresses governance mechanisms for regulatory review using AI technology, with implicit coverage of governance failure (6.5) through its focus on identifying obsolete regulations. The document mentions AI as a tool for regulatory review but does not substantively address AI-specific risks or harms.
This document governs Public Administration (excluding National Security) as it applies to all federal agencies conducting regulatory reviews. It does not target specific economic sectors but rather establishes processes for government agencies to review regulations across all sectors they regulate.
The document does not govern the AI development lifecycle itself, but rather mandates the use of AI and technology as tools for conducting retrospective regulatory reviews. It focuses on the deployment and operational use of AI tools by federal agencies for regulatory analysis purposes.
The document explicitly mentions artificial intelligence and algorithmic tools as technologies to be used for regulatory review. It does not define AI models, systems, or specify particular types of AI. The focus is on AI as a tool for analysis rather than as a subject of regulation.
United States Congress
The document is an Act of Congress, as indicated by the legislative format and structure. Congress is the proposing authority for this federal statute.
Office of Management and Budget; Administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs; Committee on Oversight and Accountability of the House of Representatives; Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of the Senate
The OMB and Administrator have oversight authority to issue guidance and receive agency plans. Congressional committees receive reports and plans, providing legislative oversight and enforcement through their oversight functions.
Office of Management and Budget; Administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs; Committee on Oversight and Accountability of the House of Representatives; Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of the Senate
The same entities that enforce also monitor implementation through required reporting mechanisms. The Administrator receives agency plans and the congressional committees receive both reports and plans for oversight purposes.
Federal agencies; Office of Management and Budget; Administrator of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs; Director of the Government Publishing Office; Archivist of the United States; Director of the Federal Register
The Act applies to federal agencies and specific government offices responsible for regulatory management. The term 'agency' is defined as having the meaning given in section 3502 of title 44, United States Code, covering federal executive agencies.