Requires the Director of the Office of Management and Budget to report on using AI to identify duplicative federal grant applications and detect waste, fraud, and abuse, in collaboration with designated federal agencies, submitted to relevant Congressional committees.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a Congressional act that creates a binding legal obligation on the Director of the Office of Management and Budget to submit a report to Congressional committees, using mandatory language ('shall submit').
The document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains, with only subdomain 6.5 (Governance Failure) receiving a coverage score of 2. The document focuses narrowly on using AI to identify duplicative grant applications and detect waste, fraud, and abuse, which relates to governance mechanisms but does not substantively address the risks of governance failure or other AI-related harms.
This document primarily governs Public Administration (excluding National Security) as it regulates federal government grant administration processes. It also has minimal coverage of Scientific Research and Development Services through the involvement of NSF and NIST in the consultation process.
The document focuses primarily on the Plan and Design stage, as it requires a feasibility report on leveraging AI for a specific purpose (identifying duplicative grant applications). It does not substantively address data collection, model building, verification, deployment, or operational monitoring stages.
The document mentions artificial intelligence in general terms but does not define or distinguish between AI models, AI systems, or any specific types of AI. There is no mention of frontier AI, general purpose AI, task-specific AI, foundation models, generative AI, predictive AI, open-weight models, or compute thresholds.
United States Congress
The document is titled as an Act of Congress and represents Congressional legislation requiring federal agencies to report on AI feasibility.
United States Congress; appropriate Congressional committees
Congress enforces compliance through its oversight authority, with the reporting requirement to Congressional committees serving as the enforcement mechanism.
appropriate Congressional committees
Congressional committees will receive and review the report on AI feasibility, serving as the monitoring body for this requirement.
Director of the Office of Management and Budget; Secretary of Energy; Director of the National Science Foundation; Director of the National Institute of Standards and Technology; executive agency
The Act applies to and creates obligations for specific federal officials and executive agencies who must assess AI feasibility for grant application review.