House Passes Historic AI Bill for US Small Businesses
Main Street can afford to be merry, thanks to an important vote.
The House of Representatives pushed through the AI for Main Street Act with an overwhelming 395-14 vote, creating a U.S. government mandate to provide AI education access to small enterprises nationwide.
This bipartisan event signals that the AI revolution has officially reached Main Street, with lawmakers recognizing that small businesses can no longer be left behind in the technological transformation reshaping the economy.
Changing times
Small business AI adoption has risen by 18% compared to last year and more than doubled since 2023, U.S. Chamber data from three months ago confirms. Yet a 65% of small businesses remain wary of rising compliance costs from conflicting state AI regulations, Chamber research revealed two months ago.
Here’s how it works: The SBA’s massive network of over 900 service locations coordinating 62 development centers nationwide will become AI training hubs for secure, ethical implementation. Bill sponsor Rep. Mark Alford warned that larger corporations are rapidly integrating AI technologies while smaller enterprises struggle and risk being left behind.
These new training centers will specifically focus on helping businesses use AI for planning unexpected circumstances, protecting intellectual property, improving cybersecurity, and bolstering customer trust.
Congress forced to act
Behind the scenes, a regulatory nightmare has been building that threatens to crush small businesses. State legislators introduced over 1,100 AI-related bills in 2025 alone, creating a patchwork of conflicting requirements. Colorado’s comprehensive AI law, taking effect this June, could cost the state 40,000 jobs and $7 billion in economic output by 2030.
But wait, it gets worse: If applied nationwide, similar regulations could eliminate 92,000 jobs and cost the U.S. economy $53.7 billion in GDP by 2030. The stakes are enormous for small businesses, which employ nearly half the private workforce and created 63% of all new jobs between 1995-2021.
Currently, 24% of small employers use AI technologies, with 63% believing AI utilization will be important in their industry over the next five years, NFIB research from seven months ago shows.
America’s economic future
The bill now heads to the Senate, where its fate will determine whether America’s 33 million small businesses get the AI education lifeline they need. Notably, the bill allocates no additional funding, raising questions about implementation capacity.
However, the bipartisan support suggests momentum for passage, especially considering 82% of small business owners using AI increased their workforce last year. Private sector momentum is already building — in October 2025, Google announced $5 million in funding to train 40,000 small businesses through the Small Business B(AI)sics program.
This builds on existing initiatives like the AI U Program, which provides one-on-one coaching and training resources to small businesses with Google’s backing.
With nearly 60% of small business owners planning AI investments this year and 54% saying AI contributes to business growth, this legislation could unlock economic expansion.
Global concern about AI is set to intensify in 2026, following a year in which job cuts linked to the technology dominated headlines and public debate.
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