The scope of the order remains partially undefined. State officials have not yet detailed which industries or workforce segments will receive priority attention, nor have they specified timelines for agency recommendations or implementation benchmarks. The order calls for input from universities, labor experts, economists, industry leaders, and workforce organizations, but the mechanism for incorporating external stakeholders into the process is not yet clear.
The order represents a shift in California's AI policy from government-focused risk management to proactive labor-market intervention. Attorneys advising employers, workers, or workforce development organizations should monitor how state agencies interpret the WARN Act amendments and severance requirements, as California's approach may establish a template for other states. The emphasis on ensuring workers share in AI-driven productivity gains signals potential future legislation around profit-sharing or equity arrangements tied to automation.