📄 Page 12 of FY 2026-27 Budget Recommendation for MN Department of Education
Fraud Detection & Prevention – Key Takeaways (FY 2026–27)
- What’s being proposed:
The Governor recommends $550,000 per year to strengthen fraud prevention at the Minnesota Department of Education (MDE). - What the money funds:
- 3 new staff positions (FTEs):
- 1 legal counsel for nutrition programs
- 1 legal counsel for charter school oversight
- 1 Office of Inspector General (OIG) investigator
- Case-tracking and financial analysis software to detect and investigate fraud
- 3 new staff positions (FTEs):
- Why it’s needed:
- MDE has seen increased fraud, waste, and abuse risks, especially in nutrition programs and charter schools
- Oversight authority is often legally complex and contested, requiring stronger legal support
- The OIG is receiving more complaints than current staffing can handle
- Better tools are needed to track cases, analyze financial records, and stop fraud earlier
- How it helps:
- Enables MDE to prevent fraud before it starts
- Improves ability to investigate and stop fraudulent payments quickly
- Strengthens MDE’s ability to defend enforcement actions in court
- Increases public trust by showing fraud complaints are handled promptly
- Cost breakdown (annual):
- Nutrition legal counsel: $170,000
- Charter school legal counsel: $170,000
- OIG investigator: $145,000
- Software (case tracking + financial forensics): $65,000
- Total: $550,000 per year (General Fund)
- Impact on children and families:
Ensures education funds are used as intended, protecting resources meant for students and families. - What success looks like:
- More fraud cases identified (short-term increase expected)
- Faster investigations
- Fewer payments to fraudulent entities
- Stronger enforcement that holds up on appeal
- Evidence caveat:
- No formal program evaluation yet
- No identified evidence-based practices tied to this proposal
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