The Center for AI Standards and Innovation doesn’t have a guaranteed budget right now. The Great American AI Act would change that. The bipartisan discussion draft released June 4, led by Reps. Lori Trahan (D-MA) and Jay Obernolte (R-CA), proposes authorizing $100 million per fiscal year, covering fiscal years 2027 through 2029, for CAISI, the federal standards center housed at the National Institute of Standards and Technology. That’s the headline provision compliance teams haven’t been talking about enough.
The conversation about the GAAIA has centered on its three-year state law preemption window, and understandably so. But the CAISI authorization is the provision with the longest operational tail. Organizations that have built compliance programs around the NIST AI RMF depend, often without fully recognizing it, on the institutional continuity of the body that produced that framework. CAISI’s ability to update, extend, and certify AI standards has historically been subject to annual appropriations uncertainty. The GAAIA’s funding clause would change that calculus. A three-year authorized appropriation is a different institutional signal than a line item that Congress must renew each cycle. It suggests the standards function is expected to persist regardless of which party controls the chamber in 2027.
CAISI Funding: Current vs. Proposed Under GAAIA
That matters because the NIST AI RMF isn’t static. The bill’s preemption provision would give CAISI-produced standards outsized authority during the window when state frameworks are frozen. Whatever NIST publishes between 2027 and 2030 would effectively be the only evolving compliance target for organizations operating across multiple states. Getting the standards body’s institutional footing right isn’t a bureaucratic nicety, it determines the scope and pace of every compliance update your team will need to absorb over that period.
Don’t expect this bill to move fast. Discussion drafts circulate before sponsors have whipped votes, before committees have scheduled markups, and before lobbyists have finished reading the text. The GAAIA is a serious legislative effort with bipartisan House sponsorship, but the gap between a discussion draft and enacted law has swallowed plenty of ambitious AI bills. The preemption provision alone will generate sustained opposition from state attorneys general, state legislators, and advocacy groups who’ve invested years in state-level AI frameworks. The real question is whether the standards and workforce provisions, which have broader coalition support, get separated from the preemption fight or get dragged down with it.
The draft reportedly also includes provisions directing the Department of Labor to support an AI Workforce Research Hub. The Department of Labor has separately confirmed plans for an AI Workforce Research Hub as part of the broader AI Action Plan. Whether that hub’s formation is tied specifically to the GAAIA bill’s mandates or proceeds independently through executive action isn’t yet clear from available sources, the distinction matters for timing. Per published analysis of the bill text, the draft also reportedly includes provisions requiring employer transparency when AI contributes to qualifying mass layoffs, though the specific threshold language hasn’t been confirmed against the bill text.
Who This Affects
For compliance teams, the actionable read here isn’t “wait for the law.” It’s this: if your program relies on NIST AI RMF as its primary compliance spine, the institutional future of CAISI is a dependency you should be tracking. A funded, three-year mandate for the standards body shifts the probability distribution on framework continuity. Start assessing now what CAISI updates would require of your program, because if the GAAIA passes in any form close to the current draft, the pace of required updates may accelerate before the enforcement window even opens.