Provide $300,000 in 2024 and $500,000 in 2025 for Seattle to lease space for technology startups, focusing on AI, and to develop curricula for worker skills in AI as a business resource.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative appropriation bill that allocates specific state funds with mandatory language requiring the funds be used for designated purposes.
This document has minimal to no coverage of AI risk domains. It is a funding appropriation bill that provides resources for AI-related education and business incubation, but does not address specific AI risks, harms, or governance measures related to any of the MIT taxonomy risk subdomains.
This document primarily governs the Educational Services sector through AI curricula development and worker training programs. It also has coverage of the Scientific Research and Development Services sector through support for technology startup incubation, and the Professional and Technical Services sector through business resource development.
The document does not directly govern specific AI lifecycle stages but rather provides funding for education and business incubation related to AI. It indirectly supports the 'Plan and Design' stage through startup incubation and the 'Build and Use Model' stage through worker skills development.
The document mentions artificial intelligence in general terms as a focus area for technology startups and worker training, but does not define or distinguish between different types of AI systems, models, or technical specifications.
Washington State Legislature
This is a Washington Senate Bill, indicating it was proposed by the Washington State Legislature through its legislative process.
Washington State Budget Office; Washington State Legislature
As a budget appropriation, enforcement would be handled by state fiscal authorities ensuring funds are used as designated.
Washington State Budget Office
State budget oversight bodies would monitor compliance with appropriation requirements, though no specific monitoring body is named in this brief document.
City of Seattle; nonprofit and academic institutions; technology business startups
The bill provides funds to the City of Seattle to support nonprofit and academic institutions that incubate technology startups focusing on AI and develop AI curricula for workers.