The U.S. Department of Education, working with its Office of Inspector General, Says it has uncovered fraud and mismanagement worth millions of dollars tied to COVID-19 Pandemic Education Relief Fund. It is part of a broader effort by the Trump administration to crack down on waste in federal education programs.
why it matters: Congress distributed broadly $190 billion into the Primary and Secondary School Emergency Relief (ESSER) Fund in three rounds between 2020 and 2021. This is more than three times what the federal government typically spends annually on K-12 education. The department says much of it went through weak security measures and little oversight, creating opportunities for bad actors to exploit.
Cases so far: OIG investigations have identified specific examples of fraud and mismanagement in several states:
- Puerto Rico Department of Education $3.9 million in ESSER funds was inappropriately used on services that were never delivered as needed and failed to support students’ academic progress.
- A maintenance director in Boone County West Virginia schools, along with its parents and a contractor, defrauded the school district of $3.4 million through fraudulent documents and over-billed janitorial products that were either barely delivered or never delivered.
- Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction More than $20 million in American Rescue Plan emergency aid was improperly approved for 184 ineligible non-public schools.
Big picture: Most K-12 education funding is local – from counties, cities, and states. The $190 billion in ESSER funds was the largest federal investment ever in K-12 education.
While most of the money went to reopening schools, tuition, and mental health support, the sheer scale of the spending (distributed rapidly during the crisis) made it a target of fraud. The Government Accountability Office report confirmed that most spending addressed the legitimate needs of students, but flagged weak monitoring at the state and district levels as a continuing concern.
This pattern mirrors what happened in other pandemic relief programs. The White House has its own chief coordinator for stimulus spending. publicly accepted There was massive fraud in federal pandemic relief.
what to watch: Additional action is expected in 2026, the department says OIG will continue to audit how states and districts used ESSER funds before the spending deadline expires. Keep an eye on whether more states face demands for misspent funds and whether the Department’s fraud prevention efforts keep a close eye on how the remaining federal student aid pipeline operates going forward.
Don’t miss these other stories:
