Requires the Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration to conduct a review of current and planned AI and machine learning technologies to enhance airport efficiency and safety. Asks the administrator to consider best practices from previous applications of AI and Chinese use cases in enhancing airport operations.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative provision enacted by the United States Congress that creates mandatory obligations for the FAA Administrator to conduct a review and submit a report to Congress within a specified timeframe.
The document has minimal coverage of risk domains, with only implicit references to AI system safety and governance. The focus is on conducting a review of AI/ML technologies for airport operations rather than addressing specific AI risks or harms. No risk domains receive detailed coverage.
This document primarily governs the Trade, Transportation and Utilities sector, specifically focusing on aviation and airport operations. It also has implications for Public Administration through the FAA's regulatory role in overseeing airport safety and efficiency.
The document focuses primarily on the Plan and Design stage by requiring a review of AI/ML technologies and best practices for airport operations. It implicitly covers Deploy and Operate and Monitor stages through examination of current applications and operational use cases in airport settings.
The document explicitly mentions both artificial intelligence and machine learning technologies multiple times. It does not reference specific AI categories such as frontier AI, general purpose AI, foundation models, or compute thresholds. The focus is on AI/ML applications in airport operations rather than technical AI model classifications.
United States Congress
The document is a section of an Act passed by the United States Congress, which is the legislative body that proposed and enacted this governance measure.
United States Congress (covered committees of Congress)
Congress serves as the enforcement body through its oversight function, requiring the Administrator to submit a report to covered committees within one year, enabling Congressional monitoring of compliance.
United States Congress (covered committees of Congress); other relevant Federal agencies
The covered committees of Congress will monitor compliance through the required report submission. Additionally, other Federal agencies are mentioned as coordination partners in the review process.
Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
The document directly targets the FAA Administrator, who is required to conduct the review and submit the report. The Administrator is the primary entity with obligations under this provision.
2 subdomains (2 Minimal)