HF4537

Certain artificial intelligence use in employment procedures prohibited.
Legislative Session 94 (2025-2026)

Related bill: SF4573

AI Generated Summary

Purpose

  • To limit how artificial intelligence (AI) can be used in employment decisions and to ensure transparency when AI is used. The bill aims to prevent discrimination in hiring, promotion, tenure, and other employment terms by restricting AI use and requiring notice when AI is being used.

Key definitions

  • Artificial intelligence: a machine-based system that for explicit or implicit objectives infers from the input it receives how to generate outputs such as predictions, content recommendations and decisions that can influence physical or virtual environments. This definition explains what counts as AI for purposes of the law.

Prohibited actions and scope

  • It would be an unfair employment practice for an employer to use AI in a way that subjects an employee or job applicant to discrimination in areas such as recruitment, hiring, promotion, renewal of employment, selection for training or apprenticeship, discharge, discipline, tenure, or the terms, privileges, or conditions of employment.
  • The bill also prohibits employers from failing to provide notice to an employee or applicant that AI is being used for the purposes described in the sections above.

Protected characteristics

  • The protections cover discrimination based on:
    • Race, color, creed, religion, national origin
    • Sex and gender identity
    • Marital status
    • Status with regard to public assistance
    • Familial status
    • Membership or activity in a local commission
    • Disability
    • Sexual orientation
    • Age

Notices and transparency

  • Employers must inform employees or job applicants that AI is being used for the employment-related purposes described. Failure to provide this notice would itself be treated as an unfair employment practice.

Statutory context

  • The provision adds a subdivision to Minnesota Statutes 2024 section 363A.08, establishing the use of AI and related notice requirements as part of state employment protections.

Potential impacts

  • Individuals could have greater protection against biased or discriminatory AI-driven decisions in hiring and employment.
  • Employers would need to assess how their AI tools affect decision-making and ensure they provide clear notices when AI is used.

Relevant Terms - artificial intelligence - AI - machine-based system - predictions - content recommendations - decisions - discrimination - unfair employment practice - employment - recruitment - hiring - promotion - renewal of employment - training - apprenticeship - discharge - discipline - tenure - terms and conditions of employment - notice - Minnesota Statutes 363A.08 - subdivision 9 - protected classes - race - color - creed - religion - national origin - sex - gender identity - marital status - public assistance - familial status - membership or activity in a local commission - disability - sexual orientation - age

Bill text versions

Actions

DateChamberWhereTypeNameCommittee Name
March 23, 2026HouseActionIntroduction and first reading, referred toJudiciary Finance and Civil Law

Citations

 
[
  {
    "analysis": {
      "added": [
        "Adds Subd.9 Use of artificial intelligence to Minnesota Statutes 2024 section 363A.08.",
        "Defines artificial intelligence within Subd.9 and prohibits employment practices that discriminate on protected characteristics when AI is used.",
        "Imposes notice requirements to employees or applicants when the employer uses AI for purposes described in Subd.9."
      ],
      "removed": [],
      "summary": "This bill adds a new subdivision (subd.9) to Minnesota Statutes section 363A.08 that governs the use of artificial intelligence in employment, defines AI for the purposes of the subdivision, and establishes an unfair employment practice related to discrimination and notice requirements when using AI in employment processes.",
      "modified": []
    },
    "citation": "363A.08",
    "subdivision": "subd.9"
  }
]

Progress through the legislative process

17%
In Committee

Sponsors

    Loading…