HR-9334-119
Ordered to be Reported in the Nature of a Substitute (Amended) by the Yeas and Nays: 35 - 0.
Sponsored by Zoe Lofgren (D-CA)
What it does
This bill would amend the National Artificial Intelligence Initiative Act of 2020 to expand federal AI workforce development programs. It would direct the National Science Foundation (NSF) to create new interdisciplinary graduate and postdoctoral fellowships — open to students from social sciences and humanities, not just technical fields — and to fund workshops and AI skills training across all STEM disciplines. It would also direct the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) to develop a publicly available AI workforce framework: a common vocabulary and skills taxonomy describing AI-related jobs, to be shared with employers, educators, and government agencies.
Who benefits
Graduate students and postdoctoral researchers in STEM, social sciences, and humanities who would receive fellowship funding (tuition, stipends, salaries, and benefits for up to three years). Colleges and universities that would receive NSF awards. U.S. citizens and lawful permanent residents specifically, as fellowship eligibility is restricted to them. Employers — in both the public and private sectors — who would benefit from a larger, more diverse AI-skilled workforce. Federal agencies (including the Office of Personnel Management) that would use the NIST framework to identify and fill AI workforce gaps. Labor organizations, nonprofits, and state and local governments that would be consulted in developing the NIST framework. Indirectly, the broader public that would benefit from AI systems developed with more diverse, safety-focused expertise.
Who is hurt
Non-citizen international students and researchers, who are explicitly excluded from fellowship eligibility. Institutions or researchers in purely technical AI fields who may face increased competition for NSF funding as social science and humanities disciplines are added to the applicant pool. Taxpayers who would bear the cost of new federal spending, though no specific dollar amount is authorized in the bill text. Private-sector AI training and certification providers who may face indirect competition from federally subsidized programs.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that AI systems are increasingly shaping consequential decisions in hiring, healthcare, and criminal justice, yet the workforce building these systems lacks expertise in ethics, law, and social impact. They contend that interdisciplinary training — explicitly including social scientists and humanists — directly addresses documented gaps in AI safety and trustworthiness, and that a common NIST workforce framework would reduce fragmentation across federal hiring, education, and industry credentialing. They point to the existing NIST Cybersecurity Workforce Framework as a proven model that successfully standardized a similarly complex technical domain.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the bill authorizes new federal spending programs without specifying funding levels or caps, leaving the fiscal commitment open-ended and subject to future expansion without additional congressional approval. They contend that workforce development is traditionally a state and private-sector function, and that federally directed fellowship criteria — including NIST-defined "trustworthiness" standards — could steer academic research toward government-preferred outcomes, raising concerns about federal influence over university curricula and research agendas. They further argue that adding social science and humanities criteria to NSF AI grant reviews may dilute the technical rigor of peer review panels.