Chattanooga Times Free Press

Department of Correction says visitation will resume

- BY BEN BENTON

The Tennessee Department of Correction will allow visitation to resume at all 15 of the state’s prisons this coming weekend.

It’s the first time families and friends have been able to visit their loved ones in most of Tennessee prisons since in-person visitation was halted in March 2020 as the coronaviru­s spread across Tennessee and the U.S., according to Dorinda Carter, spokespers­on for the department.

A modified visitation schedule will be implemente­d on Saturday, April 10, Carter said in a statement. The decision to resume visitation for visitors 18 and older was based on community data from the Tennessee Department of Health as well as vaccine administra­tion at each facility, she said.

Officials said it’s important to keep inmates and their families connected while making sure everyone’s safe.

TDOC “is committed to protecting the

safety and well-being of our staff, inmates, visitors and volunteers,” Commission­er Tony Parker said. “We understand the importance of maintainin­g contact with family members and we have worked to ensure the lines of communicat­ion between inmates and their loved ones remained open during the pandemic.”

Bledsoe County Correction­al Complex, Morgan County Correction­al Complex, Turney Center Industrial Complex and Mark Luttrell Transition Center briefly resumed visitation in late September and early October but stopped again in December in response to a statewide surge in coronaviru­s cases.

The virus affected operations and visitation at all state facilities through 2020 as outbreaks started to appear in prisons across the state by mid-2020. As officials began widespread testing to track the spread, so many cases were identified at the prison in Bledsoe

last April the small rural county was ranked No. 2 on the New York Times’ list of hot spots. Officials remain cautious. In order to maintain social distancing guidelines, all visitors will be required to schedule appointmen­ts, Carter said. They will be required to wear masks, have their temperatur­es checked and respond to a series of COVID-19 screening questions before entry.

All inmates will be required to wear masks during the visits and have their temperatur­es checked prior to entering the visitation gallery. Hand sanitizing stations will be available throughout the area, she said. For more informatio­n and answers to frequently asked questions about visitation at Tennessee prisons, go to bit.ly/ TNprisons.

Volunteer services have not yet resumed, but will at a later date, officials said.

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