Require the Minnesota Fusion Center (MNFC) to annually report on the use of surveillance technologies, including artificial intelligence, types of activities monitored, and inter-agency data sharing. Involves AI governance and data practices oversight.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative instrument (Senate Bill) that creates mandatory reporting obligations with specific requirements and deadlines for a state government agency.
The document has minimal coverage of approximately 3-4 subdomains, with focus on surveillance and data practices (4.1), privacy concerns (2.1), and governance oversight (6.5). Coverage is concentrated in transparency and accountability mechanisms for surveillance technology use.
The document primarily governs Public Administration (excluding National Security) through oversight of the Minnesota Fusion Center's surveillance and data analysis activities. It also has significant coverage of National Security given the Fusion Center's role in terrorism-related intelligence and coordination with federal security agencies.
The document focuses primarily on the Operate and Monitor stage of the AI lifecycle, requiring annual reporting on surveillance technologies including artificial intelligence that are already in use. There is minimal coverage of deployment through reporting requirements about technologies utilized.
The document explicitly mentions artificial intelligence as one type of surveillance and data analysis technology utilized by the MNFC. It does not define AI or distinguish between different types of AI systems, models, or capabilities. The focus is on reporting requirements for AI technologies already in operational use.
Minnesota State Legislature; Minnesota Senate
This is a Minnesota Senate Bill, indicating it was proposed by the Minnesota State Legislature through the Senate.
Minnesota Legislature; House of Representatives committees with jurisdiction over data practices and public safety; Senate committees with jurisdiction over data practices and public safety
The Minnesota Legislature, through its committees with jurisdiction over data practices and public safety, serves as the enforcement body by receiving and reviewing the mandatory reports.
Minnesota Legislature committees; Public (through website posting)
Legislative committees monitor compliance through annual report review, and the public has monitoring access through required website posting of reports.
Minnesota Fusion Center (MNFC); Superintendent (of the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension)
The bill directly targets the Minnesota Fusion Center and its superintendent, requiring them to prepare annual reports on surveillance technologies and data practices.
4 subdomains (4 Minimal)