HOW TO CONTRACT CONFERENCE 2022
STATUS OF CLE APPROVAL
(as of January 10, 2021)
This list has the most current status of our CLE eligibility. State-specific information and links are provided in the lower part of this page.
Available
CLE is either available in these states through application approval or reciprocity, or the state has no approved-CLE or sponsor-approval requirements:
- Alaska
- Arizona
- Connecticut
- District of Columbia
- llinois
- Maryland
- Massachusetts
- Michigan
- Missouri
- New Hampshire
- New York
- North Dakota
- South Dakota
- Washington
- Wisconsin
Pending
CLE application submitted and approval expected, but no approval yet from these states:
- California1
- Colorado2
- Florida
- Kansas
- Kentucky2
- Minnesota2
- New Jersey
- Ohio3
- Oklahoma2
- Pennsylvania
- Texas3
- Utah
Self-Report
No CLE application submitted, but HTC will provide supporting materials for an attorney application in these states. Approval is subject to state approval and compliance with the state's requirements:
- Alabama
- Arkansas
- Delaware
- Georgia
- Hawaii
- Idaho
- Iowa
- Louisiana
- Maine
- Montana
- Nebraska
- Nevada
- North Carolina
- Oregon
- Rhode Island
- Tennessee
- Vermont
- Virginia
- Wyoming
IMPORTANT NOTICE: State CLE is available only for the live broadcast on January 13-14, 2022. Ticket holders may access recordings for 30 days as a courtesy, but we cannot provide attendance verification or submit CLE credits to the states for the recordings.
No CLE Expected: Indiana, Mississippi, New Mexico, and South Carolina
We have not applied for accreditation in these states and have no information that attorneys can apply individually for credit.
Footnotes to CLE Chart:
1 - Attorneys attending the How to Contract Conference from outside of California are already eligible to report credit. Pending application is for in-state California attorneys. There is no individual application for attorneys.
2 - Individual attorneys may also submit applications for approval.
3 - Credit only available if sponsor application is approved. There is no process for an individual attorney to apply for credit if not approved.