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Building better AI: West Michigan consortium focuses on trust, transparency, and design

Published March 18, 2026 by Kelsey Sanders

President Philomena V. Mantella speaks as part of a press conference at the DeVos Center on the City Campus announcing federal support for GVSU’s AI education initiative last month.

Like it or not, artificial intelligence is here to stay. And it’s being used more than ever by younger generations and those in the workplace.

According to a Gallup study, the number of Americans using AI at work has gradually increased each quarter since 2023. The same study showed 38 percent of employees reported their organizations are integrating AI into their systems to improve productivity, efficiency, and quality. AI is more commonly used in knowledge-based industries than in production- and service-based sectors. 

But Michigan legislators are preparing for that to change — and to be the leaders of that change. 

Leading the way

U.S. Rep. Hillary Scholten recently announced that Grand Valley State University will receive $1,031,000 in federal support to establish the West Michigan Trustworthy Artificial Intelligence Consortium, which will bring together partners across academia, industry, government, and nonprofit organizations.

“West Michigan should be leading the way in how artificial intelligence is developed and used, and that starts with investing in people and institutions we trust,” says Scholten, a Democrat representing the 3rd District.  “This funding will help GVSU bring together educators, industry, and public partners to build AI systems that are ethical, secure, and transparent while preparing students for good-paying jobs and strengthening our region’s economy.”

U.S. Rep. Hillary Scholten speaks with College of Computing Dean Marouane Kessentini after a press conference.
GVSU President Philomena V. Mantella and College of Computing Dean Marouane Kessentini, far right, talk with some attendees before the press conference.

Marouane Kessentini, dean of GVSU’s College of Computing, explains the benefits of the consortium.

“The AI consortium is a regional hub that connects students, faculty, companies, public agencies, and nonprofits to advance research, workforce training, governance frameworks, and best practices around trustworthy AI,” Kessentini says. “Rather than working in isolation, partners share expertise, develop standards, and create practical solutions together. 

“At GVSU, we believe AI should be advanced in a way that strengthens our economy, protects our communities, and prepares our students for meaningful careers. The West Michigan Trustworthy AI Consortium is a major step in that direction.”

Shaping the future

The consortium emerged from a recognition that as AI adoption accelerates across industries, organizations need clear guidance, safeguards, and skilled professionals to implement it responsibly. 

It will include more than 20 partners, including employers in health, manufacturing, education, and logistics, along with nonprofit organizations focused on tech ethics and digital rights. 

“This is about making West Michigan a national model for innovation that is not just fast but trustworthy, secure, and human-centered,” explains Kessentini. “That includes advancing applied research, helping organizations implement AI safely and ethically, and building workforce pathways in AI governance, safety, cybersecurity, and compliance. Ultimately, it is about innovation that earns and maintains public trust via establishing guidelines, frameworks, and prototypes on trustworthy AI.”

The role of humans

Even with the rise of AI, humans are needed to create safeguards, monitor its outputs, address concerns and biases, and ensure the systems support the community’s needs. GVSU is preparing to address those issues, starting with wide-ranging partnerships. 

“We are ensuring broad stakeholder engagement from the beginning by involving industry leaders, public-sector representatives, nonprofit partners, educators, and community voices,” says Kessentini. “We will define clear expectations around fairness, privacy, transparency, and accountability, and embed those values into governance frameworks and evaluation criteria.”

The consortium will focus on new research directions, including consents and guiding principles for AI use.

“Those values are important when training engineers who design, develop, and deploy those systems,” Kessentini says.

The goal is to help the region adopt AI responsibly while building a strong local talent pipeline. 

“Many organizations want to leverage AI but lack governance frameworks, trained personnel, or risk management processes,” says Kessentini. “The consortium helps bridge that gap while preparing students for high-demand careers. 

“Many businesses in West Michigan need clear guidelines on where to start to adopt trustworthy AI frameworks, so it is important to provide significant training opportunities for them.”

Page last modified March 23, 2026