The Federal Communications Commission is now investigating potential fraud in Minnesota’s schools.

FCC Chairman Brendan Carr announced Friday that the Commission sent three Letters of Inquiry to Minnesota educational institutions over suspected misuse of federal funds distributed through the E-Rate program.

The E-Rate program provides discounted internet access and Wi-Fi services to schools and libraries across the country.

The FCC says it has supported more than 132,000 institutions nationwide.

Minnesota, already under a cloud of federal fraud scrutiny, just picked up another lane of investigation.

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The Federal Communications Commission framed the Letters of Inquiry as part of a broader effort to root out fraud, waste, and abuse in Universal Service Fund programs:

The FCC announced that Chairman Brendan Carr said the Commission sent three Letters of Inquiry to Minnesota educational institutions to investigate potential misuse of federal funds disbursed through the E-Rate program.

The agency described the move as the latest effort to combat fraud, waste, and abuse in Universal Service Fund programs.

The E-Rate program is designed to help schools and libraries obtain affordable telecommunications and information services so students, teachers, and library patrons can take advantage of online opportunities.

The FCC said E-Rate has provided support to more than 132,000 schools and libraries across the country by funding discounts on internet access and Wi-Fi services.

That scale explains why the inquiry matters. A program that reaches schools and libraries nationwide can do enormous good when funds are protected, but it also becomes an attractive target when controls are weak.

The Letters of Inquiry are the FCC’s formal first step toward finding out whether Minnesota recipients or related actors misused money that was supposed to support connectivity.

The important word is “potential.” The FCC is seeking information and investigating suspected misuse, not announcing final findings against any school.

Still, the dollar scale makes the inquiry serious.

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Broadband Breakfast reported on the investigation and quoted Carr directly:

Broadband Breakfast reported that the FCC probed three Minnesota educational institutions Friday as part of an investigation into potential misuse of federal E-Rate funding.

The outlet quoted Carr saying the FCC is committed to stopping bad actors from defrauding USF programs, including those who target E-Rate as a way to line their own pockets.

Carr also said that when billions of dollars are at stake, the Commission needs to ensure its programs are working efficiently and effectively.

The report placed the Letters of Inquiry inside the FCC’s continued push to target fraud, waste, and abuse within Universal Service Fund programs.

That reporting also makes clear the agency is seeking critical information, which is exactly how a serious oversight inquiry begins.

The FCC is not naming a conviction or final fraud finding. It is opening the books, demanding answers, and signaling that school-connectivity money will not be treated as a slush fund.

“Line their own pockets” is strong language from a federal agency chairman.

That tells readers the FCC believes this deserves more than a quiet paperwork review.

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This investigation did not come out of nowhere.

Earlier this month, the FCC released a Federal Communications Commission order focused on fair and open competitive bidding in the E-Rate program:

The May 1 FCC order focused on promoting fair and open competitive bidding in the E-Rate program.

The order shows that the Commission has already been focused on program integrity, competitive bidding, and transparency.

That context matters because the Minnesota Letters of Inquiry landed inside a broader FCC effort to tighten a major federal subsidy program.

The program distributes communications support to schools and libraries around the country, which means weak controls can put large sums of public money at risk.

The order also helps explain Carr’s posture. The FCC has been moving on both sides of the problem: changing the rules to strengthen bidding integrity and using enforcement tools when potential misuse appears.

That combination gives the Minnesota probe real weight beyond one local story.

It points to a larger accountability push around how bids are handled, how support is awarded, and how public money is protected after it leaves Washington.

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For Minnesota, this is becoming a pattern.

The state has been a magnet for federal fraud investigations during the Trump administration, and the E-Rate probe adds another taxpayer-funded system to the list.

Carr and the FCC are doing what federal oversight is supposed to do: follow the money, ask the hard questions, and protect public funds when billions of dollars are on the line.

This is a Guest Post from our friends over at WLTReport. View the original article here.

 

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