If you relocate to a jurisdiction with rolling clock rules, what applies?

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Multiple Choice

If you relocate to a jurisdiction with rolling clock rules, what applies?

Explanation:
When you relocate, licensure requirements tied to your experience are determined by the state you’re moving into, including the rolling clock. The default is that your new jurisdiction’s rolling clock rules apply. There is room for exception if the new state amends its rules to recognize your prior experience or to adjust the clock for your situation, but that would be an amendment, not the standard outcome. So, you start under the new state's rolling clock, unless the state explicitly amends its rules to accommodate your prior clock. The other possibilities—resetting to zero, keeping your previous clock, or applying the new rules without any change—don’t align with how jurisdictions typically handle relocation unless an amendment is made.

When you relocate, licensure requirements tied to your experience are determined by the state you’re moving into, including the rolling clock. The default is that your new jurisdiction’s rolling clock rules apply. There is room for exception if the new state amends its rules to recognize your prior experience or to adjust the clock for your situation, but that would be an amendment, not the standard outcome.

So, you start under the new state's rolling clock, unless the state explicitly amends its rules to accommodate your prior clock. The other possibilities—resetting to zero, keeping your previous clock, or applying the new rules without any change—don’t align with how jurisdictions typically handle relocation unless an amendment is made.

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