The New York City Council has established a new office for AI oversight, which coincides with the launch of another AI-related initiative it announced this week.
The city released an AI Action Plan in 2023, and officials have since committed to leveraging AI, launching training for employees and an initiative to attract AI businesses to the city.
The New York City Council on Tuesday passed a package of bills -- the GUARD Act -- establishing new measures to ensure responsible AI use in the city.
Its primary component is the establishment of an independent Office of Algorithmic Accountability. This office will be tasked with auditing, monitoring and regulating agency AI tools and investigating complaints made by the public. The office must publish a list of all AI systems for which it has conducted a pre-deployment assessment. And last, the office must also oversee the enforcement of mandatory citywide standards for fairness testing, privacy, transparency and independent evaluation.
"The GUARD Act finally puts real oversight and support in place -- not voluntary guidelines or feel-good strategies, but enforceable standards," Council Member Jennifer Gutiérrez, chair of the city Committee on Technology, said in a statement via email.
AI and automated decision-making systems have impacted New York residents for years, according to the City Council's announcement. This happens in areas including housing decisions, law enforcement flagging people, decisions on benefit distribution, and which neighborhoods receive resources. Protective measures are in place -- like Local Law 35 of 2022, which requires agencies to report annually on algorithmic tools -- but compliance has been inconsistent, per the council's announcement.
The GUARD Act is designed to equip agencies with standards and oversight to ensure city government can be held accountable for AI use.
It arrives as the council's Grassroots AI Education and Engagement Initiative aims to equip residents of New York City with knowledge about AI, the city's use of the technology, and channels for feedback to officials, according to a news release provided via email.
In this endeavor, 22 community organizations across all five boroughs will receive funding to train community leaders and host more than 100 listening sessions. Participants will get multilingual educational materials. Curriculum will be developed and supported by the Fund for the City of New York, the AI for Nonprofits Sprint, and BetaNYC.
Community partners include Bronx Tech Hub, El Puente, the Arab American Association of New York, and the Smart Community Initiative. They were selected based on long-standing relationships in their community. They will be trained to better support New Yorkers with information about AI that is culturally competent and relevant to their lives.
The initiative's goal is to see more than 400 community leaders trained in a shared "AI 101" curriculum by June 2026. More than 100 listening sessions are slated to happen by then, and three citywide convenings to track progress and address community recommendations, per the announcement. A public briefing and digital data set summarizing findings and policy needs is due by then as well.
Other local governments such as Long Beach, Calif., are also making AI literacy part of their digital skills training programming, as experts argue "AI is going to cause the next digital divide."