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EU AI Act & Colorado ADMT Compliance: Human Oversight for AI Agents

Kenny Rogers · 6/8/2026

EU AI Act & Colorado ADMT Compliance: Human Oversight for AI Agents

Three regulations converge on the same obligation: a human must be able to oversee, intervene in, and override AI-driven decisions that affect people. The Agent SDK(opens in new tab) has the primitives to implement this today.

RegulationEffectiveWho it applies toCore requirement
EU AI Act, Article 14(opens in new tab)Aug 2026 (high-risk obligations)Any provider or deployer of high-risk AI systems serving EU residents, regardless of where the company is based.Human oversight with ability to intervene and override. Audit trail of oversight actions.
Colorado ADMT Law (SB26-189)(opens in new tab)Jan 2027Any developer or deployer doing business in Colorado, including companies outside Colorado that make consequential decisions about Colorado residents.Covered developers/deployers must provide documentation, disclosures, consumer rights processes, and meaningful human review/reconsideration where covered ADMT materially influences consequential decisions.
NIST AI RMF (GOVERN 1)(opens in new tab)Voluntary, referenced by US regulatorsAny organization developing or deploying AI systems (voluntary, but increasingly expected by US federal agencies).Human oversight proportional to risk. Documentation of oversight controls.

The common thread: if your agent makes or influences decisions that materially affect people (credit, employment, healthcare, safety), you need a reviewable gate between the model's recommendation and the action's execution.

Below are 5 patterns that satisfy those requirements using @openrouter/agent, building on the HITL tools cookbook(opens in new tab) (which covers the SDK mechanics). Here we cover the compliance patterns you bolt on top.

Note: This post provides engineering patterns, not legal advice. Consult legal counsel to determine which regulations apply to your specific use case and jurisdiction.

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1. Classify your tools by risk tier

Regulations require human review on actions that are consequential. Start by splitting your tools into tiers:

TierExample actionsControl
High-riskFinancial transactions, PII processing, access decisions, medical recommendationsHITL tool with mandatory pause (return null)
Medium-riskBulk emails, content moderation, data exportsrequireApproval with conditional predicate
Low-riskSearch, read-only queries, formattingNo gate needed

For medium-risk tools, use a conditional predicate that gates on context:


2. Add audit logging to every oversight event

Regulations require you to prove that human oversight happened. That means logging who reviewed what, when, and what they decided. Wire this into onResponseReceived:


The writeAuditLog function should write to append-only storage. A minimal interface:


EU AI Act Article 12(opens in new tab) (Record-Keeping) requires that high-risk systems maintain logs for their operational lifetime. Store audit logs in durable, append-only storage with retention policies that match your regulatory requirements.

3. Implement timeout-based escalation

A human review gate that nobody responds to is worse than no gate at all. Regulations expect the system to handle unresponsive reviewers. Implement a timeout that either escalates to a supervisor or rejects the action by default.

This pattern runs outside the callModel loop, in whatever service polls for stale pending reviews:


Which option to pick depends on your risk appetite. For EU AI Act compliance with high-risk systems, default-deny (Option B) is safer: the action never executes without explicit human approval. For lower-risk systems where delays have operational cost, escalation to a supervisor (Option A) keeps things moving while preserving the oversight chain.

4. Back your StateAccessor with durable storage

In-memory state disappears on process restart. For compliance, your StateAccessor must use durable storage so that pending reviews, conversation history, and audit context survive crashes, deploys, and horizontal scaling.


Every time state transitions to 'awaiting_hitl' or 'awaiting_approval', the pending review is persisted. Your escalation service (step 3) queries this table to find stale reviews.

5. Wire it all together

Here's the complete flow: classify, gate, log, timeout, resume. This assumes processCreditDecision and sendBulkEmail from steps 1-2, writeAuditLog from step 2, and createDurableStateAccessor from step 4.


When the reviewer responds (through your admin UI, Slack action, queue consumer, etc.):


The onResponseReceived hook fires, stamps the audit record, and the model receives the validated decision.

Start building today

EU AI Act high-risk obligations land August 2026. Colorado's ADMT law(opens in new tab) takes effect January 1, 2027. NIST AI RMF is voluntary but increasingly referenced by US federal agencies as the baseline expectation. One implementation (risk classification, audit logging, timeout escalation, durable state) satisfies all three frameworks.

The Agent SDK handles pausing execution, persisting state across restarts, validating human responses against schemas, and resuming cleanly. Your job is to wire it into your review workflows and audit storage.

For related governance controls (budget caps, data retention policies, model restrictions), see Guardrails(opens in new tab).

Full SDK reference and working examples: HITL tools documentation(opens in new tab).

FAQ

What does EU AI Act Article 14 require?

Article 14 mandates that high-risk AI systems include human oversight measures. Humans must be able to understand the system's capabilities, monitor its operation, interpret outputs, and intervene or override decisions. Audit log retention requirements fall under Article 12 (Record-Keeping) and Article 9 (Risk Management).

When does the EU AI Act take effect?

The AI Act entered into force August 2024, but the high-risk obligations (including Article 14 human oversight) apply starting August 2026. That's the deadline for systems classified as high-risk to demonstrate compliant oversight controls.

When does Colorado's ADMT law take effect?

Colorado's Automated Decision-Making Technology law (SB26-189(opens in new tab)) generally takes effect January 1, 2027 and applies to consequential decisions made on or after that date. The Colorado AG's rulemaking page(opens in new tab) tracks implementation details.

Does Colorado's ADMT law apply to companies outside Colorado?

Yes. The law applies to any developer or deployer "doing business in" Colorado, not just companies headquartered there. If you deploy ADMT that materially influences consequential decisions (employment, finance, housing, insurance, healthcare, education, essential government services) about Colorado residents, you're likely subject to the law. This follows the same jurisdictional pattern as the Colorado Privacy Act(opens in new tab), which covers entities that conduct business in Colorado or target Colorado residents with commercial products or services. Enforcement runs through the Colorado Consumer Protection Act (violations are treated as deceptive trade practices).

What is human-in-the-loop (HITL) for AI agents?

HITL means a human reviews and approves (or rejects) an AI agent's proposed action before it executes. In the Agent SDK, this is implemented through onToolCalled (which pauses execution and waits for human input) and requireApproval (which conditionally gates tool execution based on parameters).

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