Establishes the Tennessee Artificial Intelligence Advisory Council to recommend AI action plans for state government, focusing on economic benefits, responsible use, labor market impacts, and transparency. Requires annual reports through 2028, with a final report due by December 31, 2028.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative act passed by the Tennessee General Assembly that creates a statutory advisory council with mandatory reporting requirements and specific deadlines.
The document has minimal coverage of risk domains, with brief mentions of governance structures (6.5), labor market impacts (6.2), and transparency requirements (7.4). However, it primarily establishes an advisory council rather than addressing specific AI risks directly. Coverage is limited to 3-4 subdomains at minimal levels.
This document primarily governs AI use within Public Administration (state and local government operations and services). It also addresses impacts across multiple economic sectors through its mandate to study labor market effects and economic opportunities, though it does not directly regulate AI use in those sectors.
The document addresses multiple AI lifecycle stages with primary focus on deployment and operation/monitoring of AI systems in government. It also covers planning and design through the development of governance frameworks and policies.
The document provides a broad definition of artificial intelligence as 'models and systems' but does not distinguish between different types of AI such as frontier AI, general purpose AI, or generative AI. No compute thresholds or specific technical classifications are mentioned.
Tennessee General Assembly
The document is enacted by the Tennessee General Assembly, which is the state legislative body proposing and passing this legislation.
Tennessee Department of Finance and Administration; Governor of Tennessee; Speaker of the Senate; Speaker of the House of Representatives
The advisory council is attached to the Department of Finance and Administration for administrative purposes. The Governor and legislative leadership receive reports and would oversee implementation of recommendations.
Tennessee Artificial Intelligence Advisory Council; Chief Information Officer for the state; Commissioner of Finance and Administration; Governor of Tennessee; Speaker of the Senate; Speaker of the House of Representatives
The advisory council itself serves as the primary monitoring body, with joint chairs required to submit regular status reports and annual reports to the Governor and legislative leadership through 2028.
Tennessee state government departments and agencies; Tennessee local governments; Department of Finance and Administration; Department of Human Resources; Department of Economic and Community Development; Department of Labor and Workforce Development; Department of Education; Department of Commerce and Insurance; Department of Safety
The advisory council is tasked with developing action plans for AI use in state and local government. All state departments and agencies are required to cooperate with the council.
4 subdomains (4 Minimal)