No — in Washington, judges are not governed by a separate CLE regime; they participate under the same MCLE rules that apply to attorneys (with some special allowances for judicial ethics).
Washington’s MCLE rules (APR 11) include judges (classified as “judicial members”) among those required to satisfy CLE, and the state separately provides Continuing Judicial Education (CJE) credit, especially in ethics, as part of judicial training.
Details
- Under APR 11, “judicial members” (i.e. judges or administrative law judges) must complete 45 credits every three years, including subject categories and ethics requirements.
- Washington’s courts maintain a Continuing Judicial Education (CJE) program: judges may earn ethics credits via judicial education courses or self-study, with credit assignments for judicial ethics units.
- The CJE ethics credits are part of the judicial branch’s training infrastructure and are tracked through the Administrative Office of Courts’ judicial education standards.
Key Takeaway
In Washington, judges must comply with the same MCLE requirements as attorneys (45 credits every three years), and they also engage in dedicated judicial education (especially ethics) through the state’s CJE program—but there is no wholly separate CLE system exclusively for judges.