Yes — judges in Pennsylvania have a separate continuing judicial education (CJE) requirement, distinct from the CLE rules for attorneys.
Under Supreme Court authority starting in 2017, commissioned judges of various Pennsylvania courts must annually complete 12 CJE credits (3 in judicial ethics, 9 in judicial practice or related areas).
Details
- The Pennsylvania Rules for Continuing Judicial Education require that every judge must complete 3 hours in judicial ethics plus 9 hours in judicial practice/related areas each year.
- Of those 12 credits, 4 credits must come from courses offered by the Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts’ Judicial Education Department.
- Up to 4 credits may be earned via approved distance education (computer-based, interactive) courses.
- Judges may receive credit for teaching or approved alternative educational activities (up to 4 credits).
- Newly elected or appointed judges in the Courts of Common Pleas and Philadelphia Municipal Court must attend a “New Judge School” in addition to their annual CJE.
- The CJE rules apply to justices of the Supreme Court, judges of the Superior Court, Commonwealth Court, Courts of Common Pleas, Philadelphia Municipal Court, and certified senior judges.
Key Takeaway
Pennsylvania imposes a mandatory, separate judicial education program (12 credits annually) for its judges, supplementing—rather than replacing—any CLE obligations that may apply to attorneys.