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1JUL

California eyes 45-day AI notice rule

3 min read
11:00UTC

AB 2656 would force California's public employers to give unionised staff 45 days' notice before deploying AI, and cleared the Senate Labor committee 5-0 on 17 June.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

California is filling the federal vacuum bill by bill, with a new union AI-notice measure clearing committee 5-0.

California lawmakers advanced a worker-protection bill that would force state and local public employers to give 45 days' written notice before deploying AI within unionised job classifications. AB 2656 passed the Assembly 72 to 2 on 26 May and cleared the Senate Labor committee 5-0 on 17 June 1, and now sits with the Senate Privacy committee. It is narrower than the broader bills tracked here: it covers only public-sector union classifications, where SB 951 would reach any workforce facing 25%-plus displacement.

The bill's sharpness comes from attaching the notice trigger to union job classifications rather than a headcount threshold. That routes AI governance through existing collective-bargaining machinery, which gives organised labour an enforceable warning window rather than a percentage rule a company can dispute.

The state's docket is filling alongside it . AB 2545, which would have the Employment Development Department collect AI-impact data, also cleared Senate Labor 5-0 on 17 June and is furthest along. SB 947 has a Senate Labor hearing set for 23 June. Floor votes on SB 951 and SB 947 have not been taken and are unlikely before the summer recess. California matters because other states copy what it passes, so the early-warning rights Washington has not legislated are accumulating in Sacramento and Albany instead.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

California is considering a bill that would require government employers to give their workers 45 days' warning before using AI in jobs covered by union contracts. The bill passed the state Assembly 72 to 2; an unusually wide margin; and has cleared a Senate committee. The bill covers only public-sector workers in unions, not private companies. A separate bill, AB 2545, would require California's employment agency to start collecting data on how many jobs AI is changing or eliminating. Both bills still need to pass the full Senate before they can become law.

What could happen next?
  • Precedent

    If Governor Newsom signs AB 2656, California becomes the first US state to impose an AI-specific deployment notice requirement, creating a legislative template that other states may adopt.

  • Risk

    The undefined scope of 'AI within unionised job classifications' may generate litigation over whether specific decision-support tools trigger the 45-day notice, creating compliance uncertainty for California public agencies before courts clarify the standard.

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