- Lexington’s AI policy for government staff is one of the most specific frameworks any U.S. city has published to date.
- The AI policy for government staff draws clear lines around data privacy, prohibited use cases, and employee accountability.
- The policy arrives as dozens of cities scramble to respond to rapid AI adoption inside public agencies.
- Lexington’s approach could serve as a practical template for other regional governments navigating the same challenge.
- Lexington’s AI policy for government staff is one of the most specific frameworks any U.S. city has published to date.
- The AI policy for government staff draws clear lines around data privacy, prohibited use cases, and employee accountability.
- The policy arrives as dozens of cities scramble to respond to rapid AI adoption inside public agencies.
- Lexington’s approach could serve as a practical template for other regional governments navigating the same challenge.
Why Lexington’s AI Policy for Government Staff Stands Out
Most cities haven’t figured out what to do about AI yet. Lexington, Kentucky apparently has — or at least, it’s trying harder than most. The city recently published a formal AI policy for government staff that goes well beyond the vague, aspirational language you usually see from municipal governments dipping their toes into tech governance. This is a document with specifics: what tools employees can use, under what circumstances, and what they absolutely cannot do.
That level of detail matters more than it might sound. When public employees start using AI tools — think ChatGPT for drafting communications, AI-assisted data analysis, automated summarization of meeting notes — without any guardrails, you get inconsistency at best and serious liability exposure at worst. Sensitive citizen data ends up in third-party model training pipelines. Official communications go out that nobody properly reviewed. Decisions get made that are partially driven by an algorithm nobody can explain or audit. Lexington is trying to get ahead of that. The National Institute of Standards and Technology’s AI Risk Management Framework outlines exactly why this kind of structured governance matters for organizations handling public data.
What the Policy Actually Says
The Lexington-Fayette Urban County Government’s policy lays out guidance that’s notably operational rather than philosophical. It doesn’t just say

