Yes — judges in Nevada have separate judicial-education obligations in addition to the CLE requirements for attorneys.
Nevada mandates that all sitting judges complete a minimum of 13 hours of combined legal/judicial education annually (including 2 hours ethics and 1 hour substance abuse/mental health), and judicial CLE credits may overlap with attorney CLE credit.
Details
- Judicial Education Policies in Nevada require that judges who are licensed attorneys also meet the educational requirements of the Nevada Board of Continuing Legal Education (CLE).
- In addition, the policy mandates that all sitting judges accrue at least 13 hours per year in judicial education, of which 2 must be in ethics/professional conduct and 1 in substance abuse / mental health, and judges may carry forward excess credited hours.
- Initial and specialized training is also required: newly elected/appointed judges must attend specified courses via the National Judicial College or National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges.
- The judicial education mandate is statutorily and administratively ordered (by Supreme Court orders and Judicial Education Policies), and is separate from the attorney CLE rules in Supreme Court Rule 210.
- The CLE rules for attorneys in Nevada require 13 CLE credit hours per year (10 general, 2 ethics, 1 substance abuse) under SCR 210.
Key Takeaway
Judges in Nevada must satisfy a distinct judicial education requirement (13 hours annually, with ethics and substance-abuse components), and attorney CLE credits can count toward that judicial minimum where permitted.