Wisconsin Lawyer
Vol. 79, No. 10, October
2006
Avoid CLE Reporting Errors
Errors made in reporting CLE attendance may have serious
consequences, including the suspension of your law license. Employ these
tips to avoid that risk, and file your report by Dec. 31, 2006.
by John E. Kosobucki
Complying with the continuing legal education (CLE) reporting
requirements isn't difficult, but it does require some planning - and
that's something that busy lawyers might overlook. The Wisconsin Supreme
Court mandates CLE attendance so that lawyers are kept current in the
law, thereby protecting the public. Because of the stated reasons for
mandating CLE, not complying with the requirements can have serious
consequences.
John E. Kosobucki, Marquette 1977,
is director of the Board of Bar Examiners.
Attorneys admitted to practice in even-numbered years should receive
the 2005 - 06 CLE Form 1, the continuing legal education reporting form,
in mid-October. All active Wisconsin-licensed attorneys are required by
SCR 31.03 to file a CLE Form 1 with the Board of Bar Examiners (BBE)
biennially. The deadline is Dec. 31, 2006, for completing all required
coursework and filing the form. Attorneys who file the form after Feb.
1, 2007, are subject to late fees and possible suspension from practice.
Attorneys admitted to practice in 2006 do not need to report until
2008.
The following tips will help you avoid common reporting errors.
1) Keep good records. If you keep track of the
courses you attended during the reporting period, completing the form
should take only a few minutes. Some attorneys keep the course brochures
in a file and use that information when filling out the form. Others
have developed spreadsheets of the courses they've attended, along with
locations, dates, providers, and so on, and submit the spreadsheet with
the form. Others use the My CLE Tracker on the State Bar's Web site to
record seminars attended through the State Bar. Log on to My State Bar
at www.wisbar.org to use My CLE Tracker. Effective Oct. 15, 2006, the
BBE also will offer a fillable CLE Form 1 on its Web site
(www.wicourts.gov/bbe). Important caveat: For this reporting
period, however, attorneys who use the BBE's online fillable form will
have to complete the form, print and sign it, and mail it in with the
signed original form received from the BBE.
2) File the form yourself. It is each attorney's
personal responsibility, not his or her secretary's, to fill out the
form, sign it, and send it in on time. It also is the attorney's
responsibility to make sure that the BBE has approved the listed
courses. A complete, searchable list of approved courses for the current
year and the two previous years is available on the BBE Web site.
3) Sign the form. The CLE Form 1 is a sworn document
and requires the attorney's valid signature, which serves to attest to
the truth of the form's contents. If your form is unsigned, the BBE will
return it. If your signed form is late when it gets back to the BBE, you
will be subject to a late fee.
4) Be sure the course is BBE approved. If the BBE
has not approved a course you've attended for CLE credit, you can still
submit a CLE Form 2 to request individual course approval. But approval
can take several weeks. Don't wait until the last minute to obtain
course approval; do it as soon as you have taken a course. The better
method is to ask the course provider to apply for course approval.
5) File early. Timely filing of the CLE Form 1 is
critical. The BBE mails the first notice in October and does a follow-up
mailing in November. The earlier you file the form, the earlier it will
be audited, and the sooner deficiencies can be found. Hopefully, that
will give you time to make up any credits that you are short. Remember,
coursework must be completed by Dec. 31.
6) Adhere to filing deadlines. December 31 is the
filing deadline, and forms must be received in the BBE office by Jan. 2,
2007, to avoid a late filing fee. The BBE allows a grace period for
filing the report form until Feb. 1, but forms received after that date
are subject to a late fee. The grace period does not apply to course
completion; all courses must be completed by Dec. 31.
As required by SCR 31.10, if you have not complied with the reporting
requirement by April 1, the BBE will send you a certified mail notice of
noncompliance in mid-April warning that your law license will be
suspended 60 days from the notice date unless you fully comply by that
time. If your license is suspended for noncompliance, the BBE will
notify you, the supreme court clerk, all Wisconsin circuit courts, the
Office of Lawyer Regulation (OLR), and the State Bar of the
suspension.
7) Nonpracticing and nonresident attorneys also must
file. Nonresident attorneys and in-state attorneys who have not
practiced law in Wisconsin at any time during the reporting period are
exempt from the attendance requirement but not the reporting
requirement. Check the appropriate box on the form.
8) Read your mail. The BBE routinely sends out two
CLE reporting forms, one in October and another in November, to your
official address on file with the State Bar. Pay close attention if the
BBE sends you a deficiency notice or a notice of potential suspension;
this is serious business. If you are suspended, you will have to file a
petition for reinstatement and pay a reinstatement fee. And, if you
practice law during the suspension, you may be referred to the OLR.
Following these tips will help you comply with the CLE reporting
requirements. For more information, contact BBE CLE Records manager
Tammy McMillen at (608) 261-2350, or BBE Director John Kosobucki at
(608) 261-2347.
Wisconsin
Lawyer