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Foggy Frontier | Est. 2025
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AI Is Taking Over City Hall, and San Jose Employees Are Here for It

Neoclassical Capitol Building with Lawn and Palm Trees A stately neoclassical building viewed from a distance, featuring a manicured lawn and palm trees in the foreground. Sunny, calm weather evokes institutional grandeur.

Photo by E R on Unsplash

San Jose is diving headfirst into the AI revolution, and boy, are they making waves! 🌊

The city’s latest tech experiment involves giving all 7,000 city employees their very own AI sidekick. Think of it like a super-smart digital assistant that can crunch data, write reports, and basically do all the boring stuff nobody wants to do.

From Pothole Spotting to Productivity Boosting

Mayor Matt Mahan isn’t just talking about AI - he’s walking the walk. The city has already used AI to identify potholes with 97% accuracy and speed up everything from bus routes to permit processing. Talk about working smarter, not harder!

The Human Touch Remains

Before you start panicking about robots taking over, city officials are crystal clear: AI is here to support workers, not replace them. Stephen Liang, a data analyst, shared how his AI assistant now helps him analyze 311 service requests in minutes instead of hours.

The Potential Pitfalls

It’s not all smooth sailing. The city acknowledges AI can produce some seriously wild “hallucinations” - like accidentally renaming the mayor or citing fake legal cases. The key? Always double-check your AI’s homework.

As labor representative John Tucker puts it, AI should “support work, not hollow it out”. Preach! 🙌

San Jose is basically showing the tech world how government can actually be innovative. Who would’ve thought?

AUTHOR: mei

SOURCE: The Mercury News