Illinois lawmakers aim to regulate artificial intelligence
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[February 04, 2025]
By Jim Talamonti | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – State legislators have proposed new measures to
regulate the use of artificial intelligence.
State Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Deerfield, introduced House Bill 0035 earlier
this month. The legislation provides for the creation of the Artificial
Intelligence Systems Use in Health Insurance Act, which would prohibit
insurance companies from using AI alone to deny, reduce or terminate
coverage plans.
State Sen. Laura Fine, D-Glenview, introduced the companion Senate bill
last Friday.
State Sen. Sally Turner, R-Beason, offered a comment on the newly-filed
SB1425.
“As this legislation was just filed last Friday, my staff and I are
still in the process of reviewing the bill’s specific language and its
potential effect. I look forward to further discussions on this
important issue once our review is complete and if the bill is assigned
to a Senate committee hearing,” Turner told The Center Square.
State Rep. Amy “Murri” Briel, D-Ottawa, offered a separate proposal for
government healthcare facilities.
“My AI legislation involves making sure that the state and its
contractors, like those county nursing homes, etcetera, don’t use any
artificial intelligence that determines any human’s fate without human
oversight,” Briel told The Center Square.
Briel also expressed concerns about the use of AI in educational
systems. The first-year lawmaker said, although she’s not opposed to
artificial intelligence or technology, school districts in New York
implemented AI software which flagged kids who chatted on their
computers.
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Illinois state Rep. Bob Morgan, D-Deerfield
BlueRoomStream

“Three different children in two districts in New York’s homes were
swatted for no real threat because the AI made that decision to
alert authorities without human oversight,” Briel said.
State Rep. Abdelnasser Rashid, D-Bridgeview, co-chaired the Illinois
Generative AI and Natural Language Processing Task Force with state
Rep. Robert Peters, D-Chicago. Rashid announced the group’s
“sobering” findings last week.
“We’re witnessing profound changes, many of which are exacerbating
existing inequities, from algorithmic discrimination that
disproportionately affects marginalized communities to the
displacement of workers as automation takes over jobs. Real people
are being hurt,” Rashid said.
Rashid suggested crackdowns on discrimination and political
deepfakes as well as union-supported protections for workers from
what he called, “the excesses of AI.”
The task force’s report calls for measures to support workers,
safeguard civil rights, protect democracy, enhance privacy and
consumer rights, and foster sustainable AI development.
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