The Commerce Department evaluation was due March 11, 2026, but remains unreleased. No federal legislation has yet passed. Meanwhile, state AI laws continue to take effect: Colorado's SB24-205 mandates impact assessments for high-risk AI systems, effective June 2026; California and Texas laws activate in 2026; and existing regulations like the Colorado AI Act and California AB 316 remain enforceable pending congressional action. The proposed Trump America AI Act would add liability standards, bias audits, and transparency requirements, but its status is unclear.
Healthcare providers, insurers, and AI vendors face immediate compliance pressure from the state patchwork—particularly as Colorado, California, and Texas laws activate this year. The Framework signals the administration's intent to preempt conflicting state rules in favor of federal standards, which could ease compliance burdens but will likely trigger legal challenges from states defending their regulatory authority. Attorneys should monitor Commerce Department filings and congressional movement on preemption legislation, as the outcome will determine whether healthcare AI deployment operates under fifty different regimes or a single federal floor.