Austin is putting some serious training wheels on its artificial intelligence tools, rolling out new rules that require a human to review every AI-generated output and explicitly banning uses like nonstop employee surveillance or quietly using algorithms to cut jobs. City leaders are pitching the move as a way to grab the efficiency benefits of AI without trampling on residents’ data or city workers’ rights.
In a staff memorandum dated December 23, 2025, City Technology Services laid out a framework that covers procurement, a public-facing AI registry, regular audits, and a blanket rule that “all uses of AI be coupled with a process for human review and oversight.” The memo also directs departments to update Acceptable Use and information-security policies and says AI will not be used in ways that “intrude on individual’s privacy and constitutional rights” or to discipline or terminate employees without human verification, according to the City of Austin memo.
Why now: State law and local timing
The memo landed just as Texas’ new AI law, the Texas Responsible Artificial Intelligence Governance Act (H.B. 149), took effect on January 1, 2026, establishing statewide disclosure and prohibition requirements for government use of AI. The statute’s text and effective date are detailed on the Texas Legislature website, and city staff say Austin’s local rules are designed to bring day-to-day practice in line with that law.
Worker protections and labor talks
Worker safeguards sit at the center of the new framework. The city is committing to a “no displacement without consultation” policy that requires notice to affected employees and consultation with unions before any AI deployment would eliminate or significantly change jobs. Local union AFSCME Local 1624 said it collaborated with council offices on the resolution and praised the protections as a check on automated layoffs, according to AFSCME Local 1624.
Officials’ take and next steps
Interim chief information security officer Dr. Brian Gardner told KXAN that Austin’s guidelines line up with what many other cities are putting in place and that, when handled carefully, AI can help strip out tedious tasks and save the city money. Staff have framed the rules as pragmatic guardrails so that procurement, contract review, and other back-office work can move faster without handing off final accountability to software…