The Mercury News Weekend

Jail must offer face-to-face visits

Five of California’s 58 counties have no in-person jail visits

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO — California regulators pushed back Thursday against what had been a growing movement to end in-person visits in county jails.

Future jails must include space for face-toface visits, the Board of State and Community Correction­s decided on a 7-2 vote.

Five of the state’s 58 counties have no inperson jail visits. Five more counties have no in-person visits in at least one jail, and 10 counties are building jails that will have no room for in-person visits, the board found in a survey.

The new regulation applies only to future jails, not the ones under constructi­on.

It also immediatel­y bars sheriffs from adopting new policies that ban in-person visits, but doesn’t affect existing policies.

Sheriffs have been shifting to remote video visitation that can save space, requires fewer employees and deter smuggling.

Sheriffs and the board’s staff said video visits can also be valuable for families that would have to travel long distances to visit a loved one, although families are often billed for long-distance electronic visitation­s. The board said remote visitation usually costs from $5 to $15 for every 20 minutes, depending on the county, though there is no charge for families that travel to jails and visit with their loved ones over onsite video monitors.

Video visits are still allowed under the new rules, but in-person meetings must be offered in addition.

The board and state lawmakers have been encouragin­g personal visits that they say are healthier and promote rehabilita­tion.

“The use of video had become more widespread,” board chairwoman Linda Penner said after the vote. “The regulation today really draws a line in the sand” while recognizin­g that retrofitti­ng existing jails or changing jail constructi­on plans would be very expensive.

Gov. Jerry Brown last year vetoed a broader bill by Democratic state Sen. Holly Mitchell, of Los Angeles, which would have required sheriffs to provide inperson visits at all jails by 2022.

The California State Sheriffs’ Associatio­n was the lone listed opponent to her bill but did not oppose the board’s regulation­s.

“Video visitation and in-person visitation both have benefits and challenges,” associatio­n spokesman Cory Salzillo said after the vote.

“This does take some sheriffs’ autonomy away but it also strikes a careful balance,” he said. “We understand it’s a sensitive issue.”

Two law enforcemen­t oversight committees led by Democratic state Sen. Nancy Skinner, of Berkeley, plan a hearing on video visitation next week.

“The importance of in-person visitation cannot be overstated,” a coalition of groups representi­ng former inmates, family members and policy advocates said in joint letter to the board before the vote.

Inmates who have in-person visits have fewer discipline problems, are more likely to get a job and are less likely to commit new crimes, the groups said. It strengthen­s family connection­s and particular­ly helps children deal with having a parent behind bars.

The groups including the American Civil Liberties Union, Prison Law Office, Legal Services for Prisoners With Children, and Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice wanted the board to require sheriffs to eventually begin allowing in-person visits at all their jails.

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