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Are any attorneys exempt from CLE in Rhode Island?

Yes — Rhode Island’s MCLE rules expressly provide a number of exemptions or waiver categories, but attorneys must file the required certification or waiver with the MCLE Commission.

Under Article IV, Rule 3.2(b) of the Rhode Island Supreme Court Rules, the following attorneys may be exempt from the 10-credit CLE requirement (or parts thereof): those with disability, inactive or retired attorneys, public officials not practicing law, full-time judges, newly admitted attorneys (via the “Bridge the Gap” rule), longstanding board or committee members, attorneys aged 70+, and full-time military personnel.

Details / Exceptions

  • Disability / Hardship: Attorneys for whom physical attendance imposes extreme hardship may request alternate programs or waivers.
  • Inactive or Retired: Attorneys listed as inactive or resigned are exempt.
  • Public Officials Non-Practice: Attorneys holding full-time federal, state, or municipal offices who certify they do not practice law may be exempt during their term.
  • Judges / Magistrates: Federal and state judges and magistrates who do not engage in private practice are exempt.
  • Newly Admitted (“Bridge the Gap”): Newly admitted attorneys are exempt from the general credit requirement while subject to the Bridge the Gap course.
  • Board / Committee Members: Members of the Bar Examiners, Character & Fitness, MCLE Commission, Disciplinary Board, etc. may be exempt from reporting certain ethics credits.
  • Age 70+: Attorneys who reach age 70 are exempt from the general requirement.
  • Full-time Military: Active full-time U.S. military attorneys are exempt.
  • Ethic Credit Exemptions: Certain officials (Disciplinary Counsel, Ethics Advisory Panel staff, UPLC members) are exempt from reporting 2 ethics credits.
  • Exemption Claim: The attorney must submit certification or waiver documentation via the MCLE Portal by June 30 of each reporting year.

Key Takeaway
Rhode Island does grant multiple specific exemptions—disability, judicial, public office, military, senior age, committee membership, newly admitted attorneys—but none are automatic; attorneys must timely certify or request a waiver for the exemption to apply.

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