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Do judges in Alabama have separate CLE requirements?

Yes — Alabama’s judges are generally subject to the same 12-hour CLE mandate as attorneys, but municipal judges have a separate, lower judicial education requirement.

Under Alabama Code § 12-10B-2, Supreme Court justices, appellate judges, circuit court judges, and district court judges must complete a minimum of 12 hours of approved continuing legal education annually, including one hour in ethics.

Separately, Alabama has “Rules for Mandatory Continuing Judicial Education” that require municipal court judges to complete at least six hours of continuing judicial education each year (including one hour of judicial ethics), specific to municipal court practice and procedure.

Details

  • The statutory CLE obligation in § 12-10B-2 explicitly extends to judges of the state judiciary (Supreme Court, appellate, circuit, district).
  • The municipal judge requirement is governed under separate rules administered via Alabama municipal court / judicial education authority.
  • The municipal rule mandates the six hours must be completed annually and must include at least one hour in judicial ethics.
  • The municipal requirement also applies in the first full year of appointment for newly appointed municipal judges.

Key Takeaway: Yes — while most judges follow the standard 12-hour CLE rule under state law, municipal court judges have a distinct 6-hour judicial education requirement tailored to their court’s practice.

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