Urges Delaware State Agencies and Government branches to plan for the effects of automation, robotics, and AI. Recognizes the need for daily operational and long-term strategic preparations to limit negative impacts on Delawareans.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a non-binding concurrent resolution that urges and recognizes the need for planning but creates no legal obligations or enforcement mechanisms.
The document has minimal coverage of risk domains, with brief mentions of employment impacts (6.2), ethical considerations (7.1), and security concerns (2.2). Coverage is limited to high-level recognition of risks without detailed governance measures or mitigations.
This resolution governs AI use across all sectors by urging Delaware state government agencies to plan for automation and AI impacts. The document explicitly recognizes that technological displacement will affect 'all levels of the public and private sectors', making it broadly applicable to Public Administration and implicitly to all economic sectors where Delawareans work.
The document addresses AI planning and design considerations through its emphasis on building in security and ethics at the outset. It also implicitly covers deployment and operational monitoring by urging government to implement daily operational planning and long-term strategic preparations for AI impacts.
The document explicitly mentions automation, robotics, and artificial intelligence as broad categories but does not define or distinguish between AI models, AI systems, or specific types of AI. No technical specifications such as compute thresholds are mentioned.
Delaware House of Representatives; Delaware Senate; Delaware General Assembly (150th)
The document is a House Concurrent Resolution passed by the Delaware General Assembly with Senate concurrence, as indicated in the resolution format and final clause.
No enforcement body or enforcement mechanisms are specified in this non-binding resolution. It is hortatory in nature with no compliance requirements.
No monitoring body, oversight mechanisms, or evaluation procedures are specified in the resolution.
Delaware State Agencies; Delaware Government branches
The resolution explicitly urges all State Agencies and branches of Government to plan for AI impacts, making them the primary targets of this governance instrument.
4 subdomains (4 Minimal)