Minnesota’s Child Care Assistance Program (CCAP) was intended to support working families by subsidizing childcare costs. Instead, it stands out as an example of everything wrong with government. Cumbersome regulations burden honest providers, while fraudsters exploit the program to steal millions from taxpayers.
Recent events in Minnesota highlight the problem. In late 2025, independent journalist Nick Shirley went viral for filming visits to several Minneapolis childcare centers—some with misspelled signs like “Quality Learing Center.” These centers had received significant CCAP funds but all appeared empty during operating hours. While state investigations found many centers were licensed and compliant (some closed temporarily or served shift workers), the video reignited scrutiny and concern about rampant fraud.
This scrutiny revealed deeper issues. A May 2025 federal audit by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of the Inspector General examined 200 randomly selected CCAP payments from 2023. The audit pointed to inadequate oversight of attendance records, increasing risks of overpayments, fraud, waste, and abuse. In response, federal authorities temporarily froze payments to Minnesota (and briefly to other states), demanding better verification. The investigation found errors in attendance documentation and compliance in 38 cases, extrapolating to roughly 11% of payments across more than 1,150 providers—potentially affecting up to $231 million in claims.
These findings echo earlier warnings. A 2019 report from Minnesota’s Office of the Legislative Auditor examined fraud allegations in CCAP and concluded that proven cases totaled $5–6 million over several years, but the actual level was likely higher. Prosecutors secured convictions, yet systemic weaknesses persisted: reliance on self-reported paper attendance sheets, delayed billing submissions, and limited real-time verification allowed errors and abuse to continue.
The irony is painful. While the state has struggled to verify basic attendance for subsidy payments, it imposes some of the nation’s strictest licensing requirements on legitimate childcare providers. Minnesota’s childcare sector is governed by statutes and Minnesota Rules Chapter 9503 and demand precise staff-to-child ratios (one adult per four infants), extensive training, rigorous background checks, detailed space and safety standards, meticulous activity documentation, and frequent unannounced inspections. Providers accepting CCAP face additional administrative burdens, including more forms and compliance verification.
Many honest family childcare providers have cited these regulations as a key reason for leaving the industry. Reports from 2025 describe burnout from excessive paperwork, costly upgrades, and strict enforcement, contributing to a shrinking supply of licensed spots. This reduces options for families, drives up private-pay costs, and exacerbates shortages, especially in rural areas.
The result is a dysfunctional system. Compliant providers face heavy compliance costs and scrutiny that can make operating a childcare system unviable, but government oversight has failed to identify actual criminal enterprises that seek to abuse the system. Honest center operators bear the regulatory weight; gaps in verification enable massive waste and fraud; taxpayers foot the bill; and families struggle to find reliable care.
Policy and political leaders must do better. This is not about abandoning commonsense health and safety standards at daycare centers. But Minnesota’s experience shows that overregulation without effective enforcement fails everyone. A smarter approach would streamline rules to essential protections, real monitoring of those using or receiving government subsidies, swift investigations, and permanent bans and criminal penalties for proven fraud.
Minnesota’s CCAP challenges are a cautionary tale for policymakers nationwide. When bureaucracy grows unchecked, it burdens the compliant, overlooks vulnerabilities, and erodes public trust. Reforming it requires balance: protect children and taxpayers without strangling the providers who serve them. Until then, the system remains broken—and Minnesotans deserve better.
Katie Cook is a policy research assistant at Independent Women.
The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not reflect the official position of the Daily Caller News Foundation.
(Featured Image Media Credit: Screenshot/X/@NickShirleyy)
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