Who we serve

PRC Impact is built for the places where AI governance cannot stay theoretical.

The firm focuses on public-facing organizations where AI use affects people, records, funding, decisions, or public confidence.

Client Records

Human Services

Case management agencies, child and family services, disability services, and community-based organizations.

AI may enter staff work before leadership has set the rule. PRC Impact creates the standard for what is permissible, what needs review, and what must stay human-led.

HIPAA

Clinical Healthcare Practices

Dental offices, behavioral health practices, ABA clinics, mental health providers, and physician offices managing patient information, clinical documentation, and staff workflows.

AI use in clinical environments raises privacy, documentation, supervision, and patient trust questions. “HIPAA-compliant” is not the same as a governed internal standard.

Funder Compliance

Grant-Funded Nonprofits

Mission-driven organizations whose AI use intersects with funder expectations, allowable cost requirements, reporting, evaluation, or grant compliance obligations.

When AI shapes reporting or evaluation, leadership needs to know whether that use is appropriate, documented, and consistent with what the organization tells funders.

Public Records

Local Government and Public Agencies

Municipalities, county agencies, planning bodies, and public-serving departments where AI can quickly become a records, procurement, transparency, or public confidence issue.

Leaders need standards they can explain before tools, vendor claims, or informal staff habits set the agenda.

Student Data Privacy

Education and Youth-Serving Programs

School districts, charter networks, after-school programs, and organizations working with minors.

AI use around students raises questions about privacy, parent communication, accommodations, appropriateness, and staff judgment. General policy language is rarely enough.

If your organization is accountable to people, AI governance cannot stay abstract.

A first conversation clarifies whether the next move is a readiness review, infrastructure, literacy training, impact research, or advisory support.