Yes — judges in Wisconsin are subject to a distinct judicial education (CJE / JE) requirement that operates alongside, and separate from, the CLE obligations for attorneys.
Wisconsin Supreme Court Rule Chapter 32 establishes a continuing judicial education program that requires justices, appellate judges, circuit judges, commissioners, and municipal judges to earn credits over multi-year periods.
Details
- Under SCR Chapter 32, circuit court judges must attend the Wisconsin Judicial College at least once in every six-year term.
- The Office of Judicial Education administers the system: justices, appellate judges, circuit court judges and circuit court commissioners must earn 60 credits of approved judicial education during each six-year period.
- Reserve judges, municipal judges, and circuit court commissioners have analogous continuing judicial education requirements.
- The attorney CLE regime under SCR Chapter 31 requires attorneys (not judges) to complete 30 hours in a two-year period.
- Judicial education credits are tracked, approved, and reported separately from attorney CLE credits via the Judicial Education Office.
Key Takeaway
In Wisconsin, judges must satisfy a separate continuing judicial education program (60 credits per six years, plus orientation and periodic Judicial College attendance), distinct from the statewide CLE requirement imposed on attorneys.