The American Bar Association is offering five Continuing Legal Education programs (CLE) free of charge to all lawyers and other professionals affected by the shutdown of the federal government.
The CLE programs focus on a wide range of legal issues, such as ethics, disaster response and cybersecurity.
Individuals can access the discount code to register for the courses by following this link.
“The ABA, as the largest representative of the legal profession, looked at how we could quickly mobilize to help lawyers affected by the government shutdown,” ABA Executive Director Jack Rives said. “We are offering a range of free CLE courses to those attorneys, including those who are not currently ABA members.
This is a way to help lawyers during this difficult time who do so much for the country.”
The five CLE programs are:
• “Government Lawyers’ Ethical Duties: Staying Current Amid 21st Century Changes”
• “Flying Through Government Thunder Clouds: Navigating Cloud Procurements, Cybersecurity & Regulatory Issues in the Public Sector”
• “The False Claims Act and Government Contracts: The Intersection of Federal Government Contracts, Administrative Law, and Civil Fraud”
• “Disaster Resiliency: How Tax Attorneys Can Assist When a Disaster Strikes”
• “Anatomy of a Healthcare Data Breach — HIPAA, FTC, and EU GDPR Implications”
The free offer is good through February and lawyers have six months to complete the CLEs after registering.
- Posted January 24, 2019
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
ABA helps lawyers affected by shutdown

headlines Macomb
- Macomb County Meals on Wheels in urgent need of volunteers ahead of holiday season
- MDHHS hosting three, free virtual baby showers in November and December for new or expecting families
- MDHHS secures nearly 100 new juvenile justice placements through partnerships with local communities and providers
- MDHHS seeking proposals for student internship stipend program to enhance behavioral health workforce
- ABA webinar November 30 to explore the state of civil legal aid in America
headlines National
- This Is the Moment
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- BigLaw partner won’t charge his $3,250 hourly rate to defend New Jersey cities in Trump administration suits
- After second federal judge withdraws error-riddled ruling, litigants seek explanation
- 5 hallucinated cases lead federal judge to kick 3 Butler Snow lawyers off case
- Bondi files ethics complaint against federal judge who reportedly expressed concern about ‘constitutional crisis’