Directs the Joint State Government Commission to study AI's impact in Pennsylvania, establish an advisory committee, and assess AI development, risks, and benefits. Requires legislative proposals, ethical guidelines, and an evaluation report within 18 months to state leaders.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a legislative resolution directing a study commission to investigate AI impacts and make recommendations. It does not create binding legal obligations or regulations, but rather establishes a procedural framework for governmental study and potential future legislation.
The document has minimal coverage of approximately 6-8 subdomains, with brief mentions of misinformation (3.1, 3.2), employment impacts (6.2), academic integrity issues (5.1), cybersecurity vulnerabilities (2.2), and governance structures (6.5). Coverage is primarily at the level of identifying concerns rather than proposing specific mitigations, as this is a resolution to study AI impacts rather than regulate them.
This resolution directs study of AI impacts across multiple sectors in Pennsylvania, with explicit coverage of Public Administration, Educational Services, Health Care, Information/Technology, Manufacturing, and Transportation. The document addresses AI use in state government operations and its effects across various industries including healthcare, education, manufacturing, advertising/technology, and cybersecurity.
The document does not focus on specific AI lifecycle stages but rather addresses AI impacts broadly across development, deployment, and operation. It mentions AI development, current use, and implementation across various sectors, suggesting implicit coverage of multiple lifecycle stages through the study mandate.
The document uses the term 'artificial intelligence' (AI) broadly without distinguishing between AI models, AI systems, or specific types of AI. It does not mention frontier AI, general purpose AI, foundation models, or compute thresholds. The focus is on AI as a general technology across various applications.
Pennsylvania House of Representatives members: Merski, Pielli, Madden, Neilson, Green, Venkat, Friel, Gergely, B. Miller, Schlossberg, Sanchez, Malagari, James, Howard, Gallagher, Brennan, Hill-Evans, Harkins, Khan, Donahue, O'Mara, D. Williams and Ciresi
The resolution was introduced by multiple members of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives and referred to the Committee on State Government.
No enforcement mechanisms or enforcement bodies are specified in this resolution, as it is a directive to study AI rather than regulate it. Any enforcement would come from future proposed legislation.
Joint State Government Commission, Advisory Committee (composed of various state officials, labor representatives, academics, AI engineers, and other stakeholders)
The resolution establishes the Joint State Government Commission and an advisory committee to conduct the study, monitor AI developments, and report findings to legislative leadership.
State agencies and departments, technology and advertising companies utilizing AI, universities, health care industry, organized labor, employers implementing AI programs
The resolution directs study of AI impacts across multiple sectors and entities in Pennsylvania, including state government use of AI, private sector AI deployment, and the effects on workers, students, and various industries.
14 subdomains (14 Minimal)