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Current Status

Where things stand

MilestoneStatus
SB-1047 vetoed by Gov. Newsom September 2024
Governor's working group final report June 17, 2025
SB-53 introduced 2025 legislative session
SB-53 signed into law September 29, 2025
CalCompute Consortium established in statute Gov. Code § 11546.8
Legislative appropriation to activate CalCompute Pending
GovOps appoints Consortium members Pending appropriation
Consortium framework report due January 1, 2027
CalCompute operational TBD
2024

Origins

SB-1047: The first attempt

CalCompute's origins trace to SB-1047, state Sen. Scott Wiener's 2024 frontier AI safety bill. Alongside safeguard requirements for developers of powerful AI models, SB-1047 called for the creation of a consortium to develop a framework for a public cloud computing cluster — the original CalCompute proposal.

The veto

In September 2024, Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed SB-1047. His stated rationale was that the bill's regulatory framework targeted AI models based solely on their computational size without accounting for whether models were deployed in high-risk environments. The governor then convened a working group of leading AI experts — Fei-Fei Li, Justice Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar and Dean Jennifer Tour Chayes — to develop an empirical, science-based framework for AI governance.

2025

The Survival of CalCompute

SB-53: A narrower bill, a lasting law

Following the veto of SB-1047, Sen. Wiener returned in the 2025 legislative session with SB-53, a narrowed but still consequential AI bill. Where SB-1047 sought to regulate the full lifecycle of frontier AI development, SB-53 focused on transparency, whistleblower protections and catastrophic risk reporting for frontier AI developers — and critically, preserved and formalized CalCompute as a standalone initiative.

The working group convened by Gov. Newsom following his SB-1047 veto — led by Fei-Fei Li, Justice Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar and Dean Jennifer Tour Chayes — published its final report on June 17, 2025, providing an empirical, science-based framework for California AI governance. SB-53 was designed to be responsive to that report's recommendations.

SB-53 was signed by Gov. Newsom on September 29, 2025 and enacted as Chapter 138 of the California statutes. Under SB-53, California Government Code Section 11546.8 establishes a 14-member Consortium within GovOps to develop the framework for the creation of CalCompute, a public cloud computing cluster. The Consortium must deliver that framework report to the Legislature by January 1, 2027.

"With a technology as transformative as AI, we have a responsibility to support that innovation while putting in place commonsense guardrails to understand and reduce risk. With this law, California is stepping up, once again, as a global leader on both technology innovation and safety."

— Sen. Scott Wiener, on the signing of SB-53

What's Next

The road to CalCompute

Three things must happen before CalCompute can be built.

1

Legislative appropriation

CalCompute is established in statute but becomes operative only when the California State Legislature appropriates funding. This is the most immediate and critical requirement.

2

Consortium appointments

The Secretary of Government Operations, Speaker of the Assembly and Senate Rules Committee must appoint all 14 Consortium members.

3

Framework report

The Consortium must deliver a comprehensive framework report to the Legislature by January 1, 2027, addressing landscape analysis, cost and funding, governance, use parameters, work force, partnerships and the public sector work force.