Yes — in Illinois, judges have a separate continuing judicial education requirement in addition to attorney MCLE rules (or exemption from MCLE).
Illinois requires each active judge to complete 30 hours of judicial education every two years, attend the biennial Education Conference, and participate in a New Judge Seminar if newly appointed.
Meanwhile, the Illinois MCLE regime for attorneys mandates 30 CLE credit hours every two years (including requirements in professional responsibility, diversity, mental health, etc.).
Details
- The Judicial Education Division of the Illinois Courts coordinates judicial training programs, content, and credit approval for judges.
- The Education Conference is held in even years, with judges required to attend one of the sessions.
- Newly appointed or elected judges must complete the New Judge Seminar as part of their initial judicial education.
- The MCLE Board’s rules allow “judicial exemption” status: judges, upon registering under certain court rules, may become exempt from attorney MCLE.
- Judges (or attorneys acting as judges in moot court or simulations) can sometimes earn CLE credit under MCLE rules for “judging” qualified activities.
Key Takeaway: Yes — Illinois judges must satisfy a distinct judicial education obligation (30 hours biennially), and they may be exempted from standard attorney CLE by virtue of their judicial status.