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One Hiring Workflow, Four States, Four Different Compliance Rules
Published 1 month, 3 weeks ago
Description
If your company hires in more than one U.S. state, 2026 is the year AI hiring compliance stops being optional. Illinois, New York City, Colorado, and California each impose distinct disclosure, audit, or bias requirements on employers that use AI in recruiting — and they don't align. Running a single national hiring workflow right now could mean you're out of compliance in all four jurisdictions simultaneously.
In this episode, we break down each law: what it requires, who enforces it, and what non-compliance costs. Illinois HB-3773 is already in effect, making discriminatory AI use a civil rights violation with four-year recordkeeping obligations. NYC's Local Law 144 enforcement just got proactive after a scathing audit — and it applies to any employer screening a New York City resident, wherever that employer is based. Colorado's replacement AI law takes effect June 30th with an explicit mandate for meaningful human review. And California's amended FEHA regulations raise the evidentiary bar in discrimination claims involving AI tools.
Then we look at the one pattern that satisfies all four: human-in-the-loop screening, where AI assists but a human makes the final call. It's not just the right compliance posture — it's the direction every one of these frameworks is pushing the industry toward.