DEFINITIONS
Legal Assistant/Paralegal - a person qualified
by education, training, or work experience who is employed or
retained by a lawyer, law office, corporation, governmental
agency or other entity who performs specifically delegated legal
work for which a lawyer is responsible, and absent such assistant,
the lawyer would perform the task.
Work Experience - time spent by a person employed
or retained full-time by a lawyer, law office, corporation,
governmental agency, or other entity while performing specifically
delegated substantive legal work for which a lawyer is ultimately
responsible, and absent such assistant, the lawyer would perform
the task. Time spent performing work of a clerical or non-billable
nature is specifically excluded.
Institutionally Accredited - accreditation awarded
to institutions by an accrediting agency recognized by the Secretary
of the United States Department of Education.
Legal Specialty Courses - those courses in a specific
area of law, procedure, or the legal process designed to train
an individual to perform substantive legal tasks as a legal
assistant/paralegal within the ethical confines of the law.
Substantial Compliance - the curriculum and standards
of the program conform, except for minor deviations, with the
requirements for American Bar Association ("ABA") approval.
QUALIFICATION STANDARDS
A qualified legal assistant/paralegal is a person who meets
one of the standards set out in numbers 1 through 7 below.
1. Any individual
who has successfully completed the National Association of Legal
Assistant's Certified Legal Assistant Examination Exam ("CLA").
2. Any individual
who has successfully completed the National Federation of Paralegal
Associations's Paralegal Advanced Competency ("PACE").
3. Any individual
who has graduated form an ABA-approved program of study for
legal assistant/paralegals.
4. Any individual
who has a high school diploma or its equivalent, and who has
graduated from any program of study for legal assistants/paralegals
that is not approved by the ABA but is institutionally accredited,
and which is in substantial compliance with the current ABA
approval guidelines.
5. Any individual
who has a baccalaureate or associate degree in any field from
an institutionally accredited school and either:

A.
Two years of work experience as defined above, or

B.
The successful completion of the same number of semester hours

required
by the ABA approval guidelines for legal specialty

courses
from a program of study set out as numbers 3 and 4

above.
6. Any individual
who has a high school diploma or its equivalent, and who has
graduated from an institutionally accredited school for legal
assistant/paralegals, other than those 3 and 4 above, that requires
at least 60 semester hours of study which includes at least
the same number of semester hours required by the ABA approval
guidelines for legal specialty courses and either:

A.
Two years of work experience as defined above, or

B.
The completion of a baccalaureate or associate degree.
7. Any individual
who has a high school diploma or its equivalent, and who has
5 or more years of work experience as defined above.
DISQUALIFYING CRITERIA
No person may qualify as a legal assistant/paralegal who:
1. Is under
the supervision of the Department of Corrections, or
2. Is disbarred
or whose license to practice law is suspended.
CONTINUING LEGAL EDUCATION RECOMMENDATION
It is recommended that beginning one year after an individual
qualifies by virtue of these standards, he/she shall obtain
12 continuing legal education (CLE) credits annually in order
to maintain professional competence and continued compliance
with the ethical obligations and professional responsibilities
of a legal assistant/paralegal.