Yes — you can file your CLE compliance in Utah after the June 30 deadline, but doing so triggers a $100 late-filing fee and may lead to administrative suspension if you remain noncompliant.
Under Utah UCJA Rule 11-614, attorneys must submit a Certificate of Compliance by July 31 (for the preceding June 30 CLE deadline); failure to comply on time leads to a $100 late fee, and further noncompliance can lead to suspension and reinstatement fees.
Detailed Explanation
- The Utah MCLE reporting period runs July 1 through June 30. Lawyers must complete required CLE hours by June 30 and then file their Certificate of Compliance by July 31.
- Under UCJA Rule 11-614(b)(2), any lawyer or licensed paralegal practitioner who fails to complete the CLE requirement by June 30 or fails to file the compliance certificate by July 31 is subject to a $100 late-filing fee.
- If a lawyer is administratively suspended under Rule 11-615 for noncompliance, they must pay the filing fee and late fee plus a reinstatement fee of $200, or if it is a repeat violation (within the past 5 years), the reinstatement fee is $500.
- The late-filing mechanism essentially allows you to “report late” by paying the penalty, but this only works within the MCLE enforcement framework — not indefinitely without consequence.
- There is no express rule allowing indefinite late submissions beyond the suspension and reinstatement regime. Noncompliance triggers administrative action as per Rule 11-615.
Key Takeaway
You can report CLE late in Utah by paying the $100 late-filing penalty, but if you fail to cure noncompliance, you risk suspension and will have to pay reinstatement fees.