Become a Founder Member Now!

City staff to brief council on AI strategy; B-session scheduled, council requests more frequent updates

October 15, 2025 | San Antonio, Bexar County, Texas


This article was created by AI summarizing key points discussed. AI makes mistakes, so for full details and context, please refer to the video of the full meeting. Please report any errors so we can fix them. Report an error »

City staff to brief council on AI strategy; B-session scheduled, council requests more frequent updates
The Governance Committee agreed Wednesday to send a council consideration request on an artificial intelligence integration strategy to a B session for detailed briefing. City Chief Information Officer Craig Hopkins said the city already has a drafted AI strategy and action plan, has adopted NIST risk frameworks, and is piloting seven AI prototypes across departments.

Hopkins said staff updated acceptable-use policies and internal standards for generative AI and is a founding member of the Gov AI Coalition, a peer-city network sharing best practices. He also raised state-level considerations (House Bill 1149, effective Jan. 1) requiring disclosure in certain public-facing AI uses and the inventorying of AI tools to identify high-risk systems.

Council members said they wanted more frequent briefings than annually given the rapid pace of change; several asked for quarterly public updates to the council and for a public summary of the strategy, reserving executive sessions for sensitive procurement or risk discussions. The committee directed staff to schedule a B-session briefing (tentatively January 2026) and to return with a proposed cadence for future updates; staff said they will provide a public version of the plan and note where executive session discussion may be appropriate.

View full meeting

This article is based on a recent meeting—watch the full video and explore the complete transcript for deeper insights into the discussion.

View full meeting

Sponsors

Proudly supported by sponsors who keep Texas articles free in 2025

Scribe from Workplace AI
Scribe from Workplace AI