Directs the Department of Commerce to establish a Supply Chain Resilience and Crisis Response Office to administer grants and loans to support domestic manufacturing and supply chain diversification for in key technology areas, including artificial intelligence.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a proposed federal statute (H.R. 762) introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives with binding legal language establishing a government office, appropriating funds, and creating enforceable requirements for grant recipients.
The document has minimal coverage of AI risk domains, with only implicit mentions related to competitive dynamics (6.4) and governance failure (6.5). The primary focus is on supply chain resilience and domestic manufacturing support, with AI mentioned only as one of several key technology areas. No specific AI risks or harms are addressed.
The document governs multiple sectors through its support for domestic manufacturing and supply chains in critical industries. Primary coverage includes Agriculture/Mining/Construction/Manufacturing, Information (including AI), Scientific Research and Development Services, and Professional and Technical Services. The legislation also has implications for Trade/Transportation/Utilities, Finance and Insurance, and potentially all sectors through its broad definition of critical infrastructure.
The document does not specifically address AI lifecycle stages. It focuses on supply chain resilience and domestic manufacturing support across multiple technology areas, with AI mentioned only as one of several key technology focus areas. No specific AI development, deployment, or monitoring processes are described.
The document mentions AI only as one of several 'key technology focus areas' alongside semiconductors, quantum computing, robotics, and other technologies. It does not define or distinguish between AI models, systems, or specific AI types. The focus is on supporting domestic manufacturing and supply chains broadly, not AI-specific governance.
Ms. Blunt Rochester, Mrs. Dingell, Ms. Kelly of Illinois, Ms. Wild (U.S. House of Representatives members); United States Congress
The document is a bill introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives by four named Representatives, proposing to establish a federal office within the Department of Commerce.
Under Secretary of the Office of Supply Chain Resiliency and Crisis Response, Department of Commerce, Inspector General of the Department of Commerce
The Under Secretary has authority to establish criteria, award grants/loans, revoke funding for non-compliance, and promulgate regulations. The Inspector General conducts audits to evaluate program performance.
Under Secretary of the Office of Supply Chain Resiliency and Crisis Response, Inspector General of the Department of Commerce
The Under Secretary is required to develop performance metrics and evaluate grant recipients. The Inspector General conducts audits every 4 years to evaluate program performance and provide recommendations.
Domestic manufacturers, domestic enterprises, State/county/city governments, Tribal governments, manufacturing extension centers, Manufacturing USA institutes, institutions of higher education, public/private nonprofit organizations
The document targets entities involved in domestic manufacturing and supply chains for critical goods and services, including those in AI and related technology areas. Eligible entities include manufacturers, enterprises that procure critical goods, and various governmental and educational organizations.
2 subdomains (2 Minimal)