Yes — in many jurisdictions you can request a deferral, waiver, or modification of your CLE obligations due to medical leave or illness, though it depends on your state’s CLE/MCLE rules. Such relief typically requires submitting a formal application demonstrating medical hardship or incapacity.
Here are how some states handle medical deferrals or hardship:
| State / Jurisdiction | Relief Type Allowed | Relevant Rule / Example |
|---|---|---|
| Texas | Hardship exemption or extension for illness / medical disability | Texas MCLE rules permit a hardship exemption for illness or medical disability. |
| Pennsylvania | Waiver or deferral under “undue hardship” or circumstances beyond control | PA rules allow a CLE waiver for up to one year for circumstances beyond control. |
| Minnesota | Waivers of strict compliance for compelling reasons including serious medical condition | Minnesota CLE FAQ allows waiver requests if a serious medical condition impacted compliance. |
| New York | Waiver or modification based on extenuating circumstances | You may apply for a waiver/modification of CLE if medical issues prevented compliance. |
Typical process & conditions:
- Submit a written application or petition to the CLE or MCLE board (or the court’s CLE office).
- Provide medical documentation (doctor’s notes, hospital records, etc.) substantiating the illness or leave.
- Explain efforts made to comply and why medical leave prevented timely completion.
- Request either deferral, partial credit reduction, or full waiver/modification.
- The board may approve relief for a limited period (e.g. one year) or impose conditions (make-up CLE later).
- If denied, you may be able to appeal or contest the determination (if your state allows) under rules for waivers or noncompliance.
Key Takeaway
Yes — most CLE systems allow for medical leave relief (deferral, waiver, or modification) if you formally apply and document your condition, but whether and how much relief you get depends entirely on your jurisdiction’s rules.