Establishes a Study Committee on Automation and the Workforce to assess the impact of automation technologies, including AI, on North Carolina's workforce, especially low-income and minority workers. Requires biennial reports with recommendations to the Governor and legislature.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative act establishing a formal study committee with specific membership, duties, and reporting requirements. It uses mandatory language throughout and creates legal obligations.
The document has minimal coverage of risk domains, with brief mentions of workforce displacement (6.2) and inequality concerns (6.1, 6.2). The focus is on establishing a study committee rather than implementing specific risk mitigations. Coverage is limited to socioeconomic impacts of automation on workers.
This document establishes a study committee to examine automation's impact across North Carolina's workforce broadly, with particular emphasis on low-income and minority workers. While it mentions specific automation technologies, it does not govern specific sectors but rather studies automation effects across the entire state economy.
The document does not focus on specific AI lifecycle stages but rather on studying the impacts of automation technologies including AI across their deployment and operation. The emphasis is on monitoring workforce effects rather than technical development stages.
The document explicitly mentions artificial intelligence as one of several automation technologies to be studied. It does not define AI models, systems, or specific AI categories, but treats AI as part of broader automation technologies affecting the workforce.
Senators Salvador, Lowe, and Murdock; General Assembly of North Carolina
The bill is sponsored by three named senators and enacted by the North Carolina General Assembly, which is the state legislative body with authority to create laws and study committees.
Governor of North Carolina; Joint Legislative Commission on Governmental Operations
The Governor has authority to remove committee members for misconduct and receives reports. The Joint Legislative Commission on Governmental Operations receives biennial reports from the committee.
Study Committee on Automation and the Workforce; Governor of North Carolina; Joint Legislative Commission on Governmental Operations
The Study Committee is explicitly tasked with reviewing and monitoring the effects of automation on the workforce and submitting biennial reports to the Governor and legislature.
employers; trade organizations focused on the automated workplace; low-income workers; minority workers
The study committee will examine automation technologies including AI and their impact on North Carolina's workforce, particularly low-income and minority workers. Employers and trade organizations are explicitly mentioned as stakeholders to be represented on the committee.
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