Credential Maintenance is the continuing education required by the Green Building Certification Institute (GBCI) in order for individuals to keep their LEED credentials current. Once an individual passes the LEED exam and earns either the LEED Green Associate or LEED AP with specialty credential, a two-year renewal period begins. During this time, the candidate must complete a required number of continuing education hours and pay a renewal fee in order to keep their credential.
GBCI states that these requirements help LEED professionals to maintain their green building knowledge, and to keep up to date with current best practices of the industry. The LEED CMP program is meant to ensure quality control amongst the growing body of LEED Green Associates and LEED APs. By ensuring a system to engage current LEED professionals in the most recent trends in green building and sustainable design, GBCI hopes that the various LEED credentials will continue to maintain their high integrity.
The Requirements
LEED AP’s must complete 30 continuing education hours every two years, six hours of
which must be approved as “LEED-specific”. LEED-specific courses are those in which
the majority of the content deals in-depth with specific LEED processes, credits, case
studies, updates, benefits, or best practices. The course must also be approved by an
ERB (Education Review Body) such as GBCI. LEED Green Associate’s must complete
a biennial total of 15 continuing education hours, including 3 LEED-specific hours.
If you took the LEED AP exam prior to the addition of specialties in 2009 (under LEED v2), you do not need to comply with the CMP program, and will keep your credential indefinitely unless you decide to retest and add a specialty.
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LEED CMP Activities
There are eight types of maintenance activities that can be completed towards the CMP requirements: professional development courses (must be approved by USGBC or GBCI); live presentations; self- study programs, including reading; college and university courses; certificates, professional licenses, and credentials; committee and volunteer work; authorship; and LEED project participation. However, some activities have limits on the maximum number of hours you can earn for that specific type. For example, you can only report up to 10 CE hours towards LEED Project Participation. Individuals can also renew their credential by re-taking the exam. For a comprehensive chart of CMP activities visit www.greenedu.com/leed-cmp/.
LEED CMP Courses
One of the easiest ways to maintain your LEED credential is attending professional
development & continuing education courses. GBCI’s website contains a course catalog
of approved CE courses. In addition, many providers offer the classes online for a
convenient and economic way to comply. For example, GreenEDU.com offers a catalog
of over 50 hours of GBCI-Approved online CMP courses, including those that comply
with the LEED-specific requirement. Individuals can also purchased pre-bundled
packages tailored to specific LEED credentials.
If an individual fails to comply with the CMP requirements within 24 months of passing the LEED exam, their credential will expire and the only option for renewal is through retesting. Therefore, it is of utmost importance as a LEED professional to understand and comply with the CMP requirements to avoid losing that hard-earned credential.
Green Education Services is a green building education provider specializing in LEED exam prep and continuing education courses.
Green Education Services
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