The San Mateo County Board of Supervisors has approved a resolution that requires county departments to suggest new jobs to create if positions are cut due to the implementation of artificial intelligence.
The rapid expansion of AI has left many industries and institutions questioning how to integrate and adapt to the growing technology. Local governments, including San Mateo County, are deciding how to develop policies that embrace the use of AI in their operations while also protecting jobs that could be at risk of being replaced.
“There was the Industrial Revolution, now there’s the AI revolution,” said Supervisor Jackie Speier at Tuesday’s board meeting. “We’re going to have to adapt.”
Supervisor Ray Mueller urged the board to adopt a resolution he authored that aims to protect jobs amid uncertainty about the impacts AI will have on the county’s workforce.
“We are searching for real jobs for the future, not jobs that can be cut away,” Mueller said.
The resolution mandates that county departments estimate the number of positions that could be eliminated if AI technologies were to be adopted.
It also requires departments that have implemented AI to develop a proposal for creating new jobs in an amount that is equal to or greater than the number of positions estimated to be dissolved.
Natural obsolescence
Another aspect of the resolution prevents workers whose positions are affected by AI technology to be fired. Roles deemed no longer necessary due to the integration of AI won’t be eliminated until those positions become vacant through natural attrition such as retirement, transfers or voluntarily separation.
“I want to make sure, as we move forward, that we embrace artificial intelligence,” said board president David Canepa. “At the same time, we do it in a responsible way.”
The resolution passed unanimously. The board also agreed to create a subcommittee that will work to prepare a study session on the impacts of AI for both the county workforce and improving efficiency in county operations.
“There was the Industrial Revolution, now there’s the AI revolution. We’re going to have to adapt.” Supervisor Jackie Speier
“There’s some good news in AI that we can’t disregard,” Speier said. “But I think we should have a study session so we can get our arms around it in a much more meaningful way.”
Julie Lind is the executive officer of the San Mateo County Central Labor Council, a coalition of labor unions that advocates for worker protections. She sees the resolution as a critical barrier for safekeeping county jobs against the burgeoning AI movement.
“This resolution puts in place necessary guardrails to ensure that AI doesn’t become just another reason to cut corners or to cut jobs,” Lind said during public comment. “It says if we’re going to move forward with this technology, we need to move forward responsibly.”
