Yes — Ohio imposes a separate continuing judicial education (CJE) requirement for judges under Gov. Jud. R. IV, distinct from the general CLE requirement for attorneys.
Judges (full-time, part-time, acting, and eligible retired) must complete 40 hours of education every two years, including 10 hours through the Ohio Judicial College, with 3 of those hours in judicial conduct.
Details
- The Ohio Judicial College provides courses satisfying the judicial component of the requirement.
- The 40-hour requirement applies to full-time judges, part-time judges, retired judges eligible for assignment, magistrates, and acting judges.
- Of the 10 hours Judicial College requirement, at least 3 must be in “Judicial Conduct” (ethics, professionalism, access to justice) topics.
- The requirement is codified in Gov. Jud. R. IV (Mandatory Continuing Legal Education for the Judiciary) and interfaces with Gov. Bar R. X (CLE for attorneys).
- Judges may carry over excess credits (up to 20 hours) into the next biennium, but Judicial College hours, including judicial conduct hours, must still be met each period.
- Judicial education obligations are separate from attorney CLE, which mandates 24 CLE credit hours biennially for active attorneys.
Key Takeaway
Judges in Ohio are subject to a distinct CJE requirement (40 hours every two years, with a 10-hour Judicial College component and ethics obligations) that is separate from but complementary to the attorney CLE regime.