Priorities Podcast

How Utah’s AI policy office is laying the foundation for governance

20 min · 22. apr. 2026
episode How Utah’s AI policy office is laying the foundation for governance cover

Beskrivelse

Zach Boyd, director of the Utah Office of Artificial Intelligence Policy, said in a recent interview that he’s trying to “lay the foundations for AI governance.” His office doesn’t regulate or enforce AI policy, but acts as “a developer of legal frameworks” and “manager of pilot” projects in the private sector. Body said he thinks successful AI policy will come from including many different types of stakeholders and focusing on “what went wrong, not who did wrong.” “Our philosophy is that no one is going to have the whole answer,” he said, “and we have to be bold and put out some attempts first, but then also be listening really carefully to understand the consequences of our decisions and make modifications rapidly.” This week’s top stories: The Department of Justice has delayed the compliance dates for its Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, giving states and large cities an additional year to bring their digital assets and content into compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act. Philadelphia has published a new data dashboard aimed at helping city agencies coordinate efforts to revitalize the low-income neighborhood of Kensington. One official said the effort is part of Mayor Cherelle Parker's vision to create a government the public can "see, touch and feel." Veritone, the AI company, on Tuesday announced a partnership with the nonprofit Cold Case Foundation, lending the group new technology that’s hoped to help solve old cases. New episodes of StateScoop’s Priorities Podcast are posted each Wednesday. For more of the latest news and trends across the state and local government technology community, subscribe to the Priorities Podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Soundcloud or Spotify.

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217 episoder

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Chief AI officer role is ‘part strategy, part operator, part change leader’

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