Establishes a commission to study AI and automation's workforce impact, ensuring sustainable jobs and benefits. Directs development of policies and practices to support workers and a robust economy. Requires reporting on recommendations and legislation for future workforce challenges.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative instrument establishing a special commission with specific mandates, composition requirements, and reporting obligations. The use of 'shall' throughout indicates mandatory legal obligations.
The document has minimal coverage of risk domains, with limited focus on socioeconomic impacts of AI and automation. Coverage is concentrated in subdomain 6.2 (Increased inequality and decline in employment quality) with implicit references to workforce displacement concerns. Other risk domains are not substantially addressed.
The document does not govern specific sectors but rather establishes a commission to study the impact of AI and automation across all industries. The commission is mandated to gather data from 'major industrial sectors in every region of the commonwealth,' indicating a cross-sectoral study approach rather than sector-specific governance.
The document does not govern specific AI lifecycle stages as it establishes a study commission rather than regulating AI development or deployment. The commission's mandate is to study impacts and make recommendations, not to regulate AI systems directly.
The document mentions artificial intelligence and automation as subjects of study but does not define or regulate specific AI technical concepts. It focuses on studying workforce impacts rather than governing AI systems themselves.
Massachusetts Legislature (House of Representatives)
This is House Bill 5250 from the Massachusetts Legislature, indicating it was proposed by the legislative body through the standard legislative process.
Massachusetts Legislature (clerks of the senate and house of representatives, joint committee on economic development and emerging technologies, joint committee on labor and workforce development)
The legislative bodies and joint committees are designated as recipients of the commission's report, implicitly giving them oversight and enforcement authority over the commission's compliance with its mandates.
Executive office of labor and workforce development; joint committee on economic development and emerging technologies; joint committee on labor and workforce development
The executive office of labor and workforce development is designated to collaborate with the commission, and the joint committees are designated to receive reports, indicating monitoring responsibilities.
Special commission members appointed by various government officials including president of the senate, speaker of the house, minority leaders, governor, attorney general, and co-chairs
The document establishes a special commission and specifies its composition, making the commission members themselves the primary targets who must fulfill the mandated study and reporting requirements.
1 subdomain (1 Minimal)