State & Local News
Chattanooga Area Governments Develop AI Policies
March 20, 2026
Local governments in the Chattanooga, Tennessee area are increasingly addressing the integration of artificial intelligence (AI) in public operations, with some entities like the City of Chattanooga and Red Bank adopting formal AI guidelines focused on responsible use, security, and privacy. However, many other local and state governments in the region remain without formal AI policies, raising concerns about inconsistent AI deployment and potential risks. This evolving landscape highlights a growing need for procurement professionals and contractors to support AI policy development, technology acquisition, and risk management in municipal and county government contexts.
- Several Chattanooga area governments have begun implementing AI governance frameworks, signaling procurement opportunities for AI technology providers and consulting services.
- Procurement teams should evaluate vendor capabilities in AI ethics, security, and compliance to align with emerging local government policies.
- Organizations can leverage relationships with academic institutions and advisory councils active in AI policy to inform procurement strategies.
- The lack of uniform AI policies across the region indicates potential demand for standardized AI solutions and policy consulting services to mitigate operational risks.
The public trust is best served by appropriately adopting this technology, as opposed to sticking our head in the sand and waiting for this wave to break over us.
— Martin Granum, City Manager of Red Bank
Generative AI is a tool. We are responsible for the outcomes of our tools.
— City of Chattanooga AI guidelines document
I think it's really that simple.
— Caitlin "Cat" Moon, on the difference between chaos or not chaos with AI policies
Agencies
City of Chattanooga, City of Red Bank, Hamilton County Government, Tennessee State Government, University of Tennessee
Vendors
Google, Microsoft
Locations
Sources
- βChaos or not chaosβ: Despite risks, many Chattanooga area governments donβt have AI policies | Chattanooga Times Free Press · Chattanooga Times Free Press · Mar 20