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Separation by Bars and Miles: New report
finds that great distances make prison visits
few and far between
by Bernadette Rabuy, October 20, 2015
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: October 20, 2015
Contact:
Bernadette Rabuy
(413) 527-0845
Easthampton, MA — Less than a third of
people in state prison receive a visit from a loved
one in a typical month, puts forth a new report
by the Prison Policy Initiative, Separation by
Bars and Miles: Visitation in state prisons. The
report finds that distance from home is a strong
predictor for whether an incarcerated person
receives a visit.
“For far too long, the national data on prison
visits has been limited to incarcerated parents.
We use extensive yet under-used Bureau of
Justice Statistics data to shed light on the prison
experience for all incarcerated people, finding
that prisons are lonely places,” said co-author
Bernadette Rabuy, who recently used the same
BJS dataset for Prisons of Poverty: Uncovering the pre-incarceration incomes of the
imprisoned.
Separation by Bars and Miles finds that most people in state prison are locked up over
100 miles from their families and that, unsurprisingly, these great distances — as well as
the time and expense required to overcome them — actively discourage family visits.
Given the obvious reluctance of state prison systems to move their facilities, the report
offers six correctional policy recommendations that states can implement to protect and
enhance family ties. Rabuy explained, “At this moment, as policymakers are starting to
understand that millions of families are victims of mass incarceration, I hope this report
gives policymakers more reasons to change the course of correctional history.”
The report focuses on incarcerated people in state prisons and is a collaboration between
Prison Policy Initiative staff and data scientist Daniel Kopf of the organization’s Young

Professionals Network.
The report is available at: http://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/prisonvisits.html
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Visitation in state prisons

By Bernadette Rabuy and Daniel Kopf
October 20, 2015
Press release
Most of today's prisons were built in an era when the public safety strategy was to "lock 'em up and
throw away the key." But now that there is growing interest from policymakers and the public to help
incarcerated people succeed after release, policymakers must revisit the reality of the prison experience
and the false assumptions of that earlier era.
Almost by definition, incarceration separates individuals from their families, but for decades this country
has also placed unnecessary burdens on the family members left behind. Certainly in practice and
perhaps by design, prisons are lonely places. Analyzing little-used government data,1 we find that visits
are the exception rather than the rule. Less than a third of people in state prisons receive a visit from a
loved one in a typical month:2

Figure 1. The data on how family ties are maintained in
state prison shows that prison visits are rare while the
telephone is a more common way of staying in touch.
Thankfully, the FCC's upcoming order to cap the costs of
calls home from prisons and jails should increase call
volume.

Type/time frame

Percent receiving
that contact

Personal visit in the
past month

31%

Phone in the past week

70%

Despite the breadth of research showing that visits and
maintaining family ties are among the best ways to reduce
recidivism,3 the reality of having a loved one behind bars is that
visits are unnecessarily grueling and frustrating. As a
comprehensive 50-state study on prison visitation policies
found,4 the only constant in prison rules between states is their
differences. North Carolina allows just one visit per week for no
more than two hours while New York allows those in maximum
security 365 days of visiting. Arkansas and Kentucky require
prospective visitors to provide their social security numbers,5
and Arizona charges visitors a one-time $25 background check
fee in order to visit. And some rules are inherently subjective
such as Washington State's ban on "excessive emotion,"6
leaving families' visiting experience to the whims of individual
officers. With all of these unnecessary barriers, state visitation
policies and practices actively discourage family members from
making the trip. The most humane and sensible government
policies would instead be based on respect and encouragement
for the families of incarcerated people.
Given the great distances families must travel to visit their
incarcerated loved ones,7 it is inexcusable for states to make the
visiting process unnecessarily stressful.8 Using the same dataset,
we find that most people (63%) in state prison are locked up over 100 miles from their families,9 and
unsurprisingly, distance from home is a strong predictor for whether a person in a state prison will
receive a visit in a given month.
Locking people up far from home has the unfortunate but strong effect of discouraging visits. We found
that among incarcerated people locked up less than 50 miles from home, half receive a visit in a month,
but the portion receiving visits falls as the distance from home increases:

Figure 2. Incarcerated people in state prisons report
whether they were visited in the past month, by distance
from home (in miles)

Distance

Percent visited last
month

Less than 50 miles

49.6%

Between 50 and 100
miles

40.0%

Between 101 and 500
miles

25.9%

Between 501 and 1,000
miles

14.5%

And while there are a variety of reasons why an incarcerated person might not receive a visit, the fact
that most prisons were built in isolated areas ensures hardship on the families of incarcerated people.
Studies of incarcerated people in California, Indiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire,
New Jersey, New York, Ohio, South Dakota, and Tennessee found that distance is a top barrier
preventing them from in-person contact with their families.10
Millions of families are victims of mass incarceration, and policymakers are starting to understand that.
Having established that large distances discourage visitation, this report makes several recommendations
for how the U.S. criminal justice system can support — rather than punish — the families of
incarcerated people. States should:
1. Use prison time as an option of last resort.
Understanding how putting great distances between incarcerated people and their families is often
damaging, states should implement alternatives to incarceration that can keep people home or
closer to home11 such as Washington State's Family and Offender Sentencing Act, which allows
judges to waive prison time and instead impose community custody for some primary caregivers
of minor children.12 At the same time, states' criminal justice policies should match their rhetoric
of decarceration. States such as California, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Mississippi, New
Jersey, New York, South Carolina, and Texas should recognize that they have been able to
successfully reduce both imprisonment and crime13 and lead the rest of the nation by closing
remote prisons.
2. Eliminate and refrain from adopting visitation policies that dehumanize families and actively
encourage visitation.
States should recognize that incarceration is often an emotional and vulnerable time for families
and should actively encourage visiting by making the prison environment as comfortable as
possible. States such as California14 and Massachusetts15 should stop their unnecessary and
dehumanizing strip and dog searches of visitors. States can enact family-friendly visitation
programs such as the children's center in New York State's Bedford Hills Correctional Facility16
and Oakland Livingston Human Service Agency's program in Michigan that allows incarcerated
fathers to have several hour-long visits with their children with room for activities. In the shortterm, states can make visits more comfortable for families with children by making crayons and
coloring books available.17
3. Willingly cooperate with the Federal Communications Commission's upcoming prison and
jail telephone regulations, and have the courage to reduce the costs to families even further.
Stop making other forms of communication exploitative.
Fortunately, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is finally poised to end $1-perminute phone calls from prisons and jails with its strong proposal18 to regulate local, intra-state,
and inter-state calls as well as ancillary fees. The FCC will be encouraging states to view these
rate caps as a federal ceiling. States can and should reduce the costs to families even further,19 and
states such as Arkansas and Indiana should stop fighting the regulations.20 Further, states should
avoid implementing video visitation as a replacement for in-person visits — as has been done in
hundreds of local jails throughout the country — and avoid overly restrictive mail policies like
those of the New Hampshire Department of Corrections that ban children's drawings and greeting

cards.21
4. Listen to the recommendations of incarcerated people and their families who can best
identify the obstacles preventing them from staying in touch during incarceration.22
Families have long been saying that no matter how much they would like to visit and see firsthand
that their loved ones are safe, sometimes the money and time required make visiting incarcerated
loved ones virtually impossible.23 The sad reality is that currently, a majority of incarcerated
parents of minor children do not receive visits from any of their children during their prison
sentence.24 Recognizing that their families are often the main source of hope for people during
their incarceration and the main source of support upon release, correctional facilities should
gather and seriously consider family input when making decisions about visitation and
communication policies.
5. Implement programs that assist families who want to visit.
The costs of visitation and communication literally drive some families of incarcerated people into
debt.25 States should consider implementing free transportation to prisons as the New York State
Department of Corrections and Community Supervision did before budget cutbacks in 2011.
Departments of Corrections should also consider video visitation as a supplement to in-person
visits,26 especially for remote prisons. The Oregon Department of Corrections first implemented
video visitation as a supplement to traditional visits in its two most remote prisons,27 and it has
since expanded the technology to prisons throughout the state. States can also easily model video
visitation programs after that of the Mike Durfee State Prison in South Dakota where, for 12 hours
every week, incarcerated people have access to free video visits using Skype.28
6. When faced with prison overcrowding, explore sentencing and parole reforms instead of
prison expansion and out-of-state transfers.
Often, when states are faced with prison overcrowding, they adopt band-aid fixes like sending
people to out-of-state prisons where they will be even further from their families.29 More effective
solutions are to first adopt low-hanging fruit reforms such as reducing the aging prison population
or allowing primary caregivers to serve their sentences in the community, and then to explore
larger-scale sentencing and parole reforms.

Appendix
Using the Bureau of Justice Statistics's 2004 Survey of Inmates in State Correctional Facilities, we found
the breakdown of how far people in state prisons reported being locked up from their home
communities. The table below provides estimated counts for the total U.S. state prison population based
on the responses of the 14,500 people imprisoned in state prisons who responded to the BJS survey.
To get this data, we relied on the question: S7Q6c. How far from this prison is ... where you were living
at the time of your arrest? Is it less than 50 miles, between 50 miles and 100 miles, between 101 and 500
miles, between 501 and 1,000 miles, or more than 1,000 miles?

Figure 3. How far incarcerated people in state prisons are imprisoned
from their homes (in miles)

Distance
Less than 50 miles

Count

Proportion

184,041

15.7%

Between 50 and 100
miles

244,981

20.9%

Between 101 and
500 miles

623,011

53.2%

Between 501 and
1,000 miles

92,356

7.9%

More than 1,000
miles

26,017

2.2%

Methodology
The Bureau of Justice Statistics collects visitation and distance from home data periodically as a part of
its Survey of Inmates in State Correctional Facilities,30 but BJS does not routinely publish the results in
a format that can be accessed without statistical software. The Bureau of Justice Statistics published data
on how far incarcerated parents of minor children are from their children in Parents in Prison and Their
Minor Children.31 We prepared this report to focus on people imprisoned in state prison in general.
This report relies on the Bureau of Justice Statistics survey from 2004, which is the newest available.
The next survey32 is being conducted in 2015–2016 with the data to be available several years later.
While 2004 is older than we would like, we know of no reason or trend that would make visitation data
from the 2004 survey an unreliable reflection of visitation today, in 2015.
For this report, we used the Survey of Inmates in State Correctional Facilities's questions about the
location of pre-incarceration homes as a proxy for where family and community ties are located. We
used the following questions from the Survey:
S7Q6c. How far from this prison is ... where you were living at the time of your arrest? Is it less
than 50 miles, between 50 miles and 100 miles, between 101 and 500 miles, between 501 and
1,000 miles, or more than 1,000 miles?
S10Q7a. Are you allowed to talk on the telephone with friends and family?
S10Q7b. In the past week, how many telephone calls have you made or received? Do not include
calls to or from a lawyer.
S10Q8a. In the past month, have you had any visits, not counting visits from lawyers?
S10Q8c. Were you allowed to have any visits?

Acknowledgments
Thank you to Elydah Joyce for the illustrations depicting the emotional toll caused by incarceration.

Footnotes

1. We used data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics' 2004 Survey of Inmates in State Correctional
Facilities. More information is available here: http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?
ty=dcdetail&iid=275. ↩
2. Our analysis is based on people who were permitted to talk on the phone and permitted to have
visits in a given month. The survey we used did not include meetings with lawyers as "visits." ↩
3. A rigorous Minnesota Department of Corrections study found that a single visit reduces recidivism
by 13% for new crimes and 25% for technical violations, and an Ohio Department of Corrections
study found that more visits were associated with fewer rule violations. See: Minnesota
Department of Corrections, The Effects of Prison Visitation on Offender Recidivism (St. Paul, MN:
Minnesota Department of Corrections, November 2011). Accessed on October 14, 2015 from:
http://www.doc.state.mn.us/pages/files/large-files/Publications/1111MNPrisonVisitationStudy.pdf. See also: Gary C. Mohr, An Overview of Research Findings in
the Visitation, Offender Behavior Connection (Columbus, OH: Ohio Department of Rehabilitation
and Correction, 2012). Accessed on October 16, 2015 from:
http://www.asca.net/system/assets/attachments/5101/Mohr%20%20OH%20DRC%20Visitation%20Research%20Summary.pdf?1352146798. ↩
4. The study focused on policy directives (detailed rules promulgated by correctional administrators),
but there are two more layers that govern prison visitation not included in the study: administrative
regulations (general grants of rulemaking authority to correctional administrators) and facilityspecific rules (applicable to specific prisons and usually more detailed than policy directives yet
not always comprehensive). See: Chesa Boudin, Trevor Stutz, and Aaron Littman, "Prison
Visitation Policies: A Fifty State Survey" Yale Law & Policy Review Vol 32:149 (March 2014),
157-166. ↩
5. Requiring social security numbers can deter family members who are not legal citizens from
visiting. ↩
6. See the visitor's guidelines for Monroe Correctional Complex for an example:
http://www.doc.wa.gov/facilities/prison/mcc/docs/mccvisitguidelines.pdf. ↩
7. The practice of incarcerating people far from their families is is not an inevitable outcome of
incarceration. States and the Bureau of Prisons could choose to place incarcerated people in
prisons that are closer to their families. For example, New Jersey's 2010 Strengthening Women
and Families Act led to N.J. Rev. Stat. § 30:4-8.6 (2014), which requires that the Department of
Corrections Commissioner make every effort to assign incarcerated women to the prisons closest
to their families and Fla. Stat. § 944.171(4) (2015) states that, as much as possible, the department
should consider the proximity of a prison to an incarcerated person's family when making
placements. See: New York Initiative for Children of Incarcerated Parents, "Fact Sheet: Proximity
to Children when a Parent is Incarcerated," The Osborne Association, 2013. Accessed on October
2, 2015 from:
http://www.osborneny.org/images/uploads/printMedia/ProximityFactSheet_OA2013.pdf.
Unfortunately, there has been a trend away from the Bureau of Prisons honoring judges'
recommendations on prison placements to ignoring these recommendations. The Bureau of
Prisons should consider judges' assessments of those who are sentenced and make its best attempt
to honor recommendations to keep people closer to home. See: Federal Bureau of Prisons, Legal
Resource Guide to the Federal Bureau of Prisons 2014 (Washington, DC: U.S. Department of
Justice, 2014), p 12. Accessed on October 14, 2015 from:
https://www.bop.gov/resources/pdfs/legal_guide.pdf. See also: S. David Mitchell, "Impeding
Reentry: Agency and Judicial Obstacles to Longer Halfway House Placements" Mich. J. Race &
L. Vol 16:235 (2011). ↩
8. "Riding the Bus: Barriers to Prison Visitation and Family Management Services" describes the
visiting experience for New York State families based on 200 hours of observation of family

9.
10.

11.

12.

13.

14.

15.

16.

support group meetings, attendance at activities aimed at families of incarcerated people, and
observation of five bus rides to two upstate New York prisons. See: Johnna Christian, "Riding the
Bus: Barriers to Prison Visitation and Family Management Services" Journal of Contemporary
Criminal Justice Vol 21:31 (February 2005). ↩
See Appendix. ↩
In a 2010 study by the Department of Health and Human Services, incarcerated fathers reported
distance to the prison as the top barrier to contact. See: Office of the Assistant Secretary for
Planning and Evaluation, Parenting from Prison: Innovative Programs to Support Incarcerated
and Reentering Fathers (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services,
April 2010). Accessed on October 8, 2015 from: http://aspe.hhs.gov/basic-report/parenting-prisoninnovative-programs-support-incarcerated-and-reentering-fathers. See also a New York Statespecific study: NYS Division of Criminal Justice Services, Children of Incarcerated Parents in
New York State: A Data Analysis (Albany, NY: NYS Division of Criminal Justice Services, 2013).
Accessed on August 18, 2015 from: http://www.criminaljustice.ny.gov/pio/2013-children-withinarcerated-parents-report.pdf. ↩
Criminologists William D. Bales and Daniel P. Mears found that visitation reduces and delays
recidivism. As a result, they recommended placing incarcerated people close to their home
communities as one low-cost policy option. See: William D. Bales and Daniel P. Mears, "Inmate
Social Ties and the Transition to Society: Does Visitation Reduce Recidivism?" Journal of
Research in Crime and Delinquency Vol 45:287 (2008), 315. A Minnesota Department of
Corrections study recommended that if — as this report finds — there is a significant relationship
between visitation and distance, states such as Minnesota should seriously consider distance from
home when placing incarcerated people in particular prisons. See: Minnesota Department of
Corrections, 2011, p 31. ↩
This is no doubt a positive reform, but states should go even further by expanding eligibility to
include parents who might not have custody of their children. States should also consider allowing
judges the discretion to impose community custody for people with past violent offenses. For more
on Washington State's Family and Offender Sentencing Alternative, see:
http://www.doc.wa.gov/community/fosa/ ↩
Public Safety Performance Project, "Most States Cut Imprisonment and Crime," The Pew
Charitable Trusts, November 10, 2014 from: http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/multimedia/datavisualizations/2014/imprisonment-and-crime. See also: Lauren-Brooke Eisen and Inimai Chettiar,
The Reverse Mass Incarceration Act (New York, NY: The Brennan Center for Justice at the New
York University School of Law, October 2015), p 10. Accessed on October 14, 2015 from:
https://www.brennancenter.org/sites/default/files/publications/The_Reverse_Mass_Incarceration_Act%20.pdf.
↩
Paige St. John, "California steps up prison drug screening for visitors and staff," Los Angeles
Times, March 3, 2015. Accessed on October 14, 2015 from:
http://www.latimes.com/local/political/la-me-ff-california-steps-up-prison-drug-screening-forvisitors-and-staff-20150303-story.html. ↩
Meghan E. Irons, "Prison visitors irate about plan for drug-sniffing dogs," The Boston Globe,
March 23, 2013. Accessed on October 14, 2015 from:
http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2013/03/22/visitors-could-soon-face-random-narcotics-dogssniff-state-prisons/BPTYlAFi6vuwghlfPM1GsN/story.html. ↩
For more information on New York State's children's centers, visit The Osborne Association
website: http://www.osborneny.org/programs.cfm?programID=11. See also: Tanya Krupat,
Elizabeth Gaynes, and Yali Lincroft, A Call to Action: Safeguarding New York's Children of
Incarcerated Parents (New York, NY: The New York Initiative for Children of Incarcerated
Parents, The Osborne Association, 2011), p 33. Accessed on August 27, 2015 from:

17.
18.

19.

20.
21.

22.

23.

24.

25.

26.

http://www.osborneny.org/NYCIP/ACalltoActionNYCIP.Osborne2011.pdf. ↩
Krupat, Gaynes, and Lincroft, 2011, p 34. ↩
Peter Wagner, "FCC commissioners reveal details of their proposal to protect all families of
incarcerated people," Prison Policy Initiative, October 1, 2015. Accessed on October 19, 2015
from: http://www.prisonpolicy.org/blog/2015/10/01/clyburn-proposal/. ↩
In 2013 New York Department of Corrections and Community Supervision Acting Commissioner
Anthony J. Annucci submitted a letter to the Federal Communications Commission explaining that
when New York State eliminated the commission in its phone contract and substantially reduced
the rate to families, the number of calls rose from 5.4 million calls in 2006 to over 14 million in
2013, it improved the relationship between the Department and "offender advocacy groups," and it
lowered the rate of illicit cell phone use. He called prison phone reform "among the most costeffective family reunification options that we offer." See:
http://www.prisonpolicy.org/phones/NYDOCCSletter.pdf. In total, the Federal Bureau of Prisons
and ten states have banned commissions. See: https://www.prisonphonejustice.org/. ↩
Securus Technologies v. FCC (Docket No. 13-1280, D.C. Cir. 2015) ↩
Jeremy Blackman, "Prison tightens mail policy in effort to curb drug influx," Concord Monitor,
April 13, 2015. Accessed on April 30, 21015 from:
http://www.concordmonitor.com/home/16462117-95/prison-tightens-mail-policy-in-effort-to-curbdrug-influx. States should also avoid letter ban policies, which — as our February 2013 report
found — have been implemented in local jails across the country. Leah Sakala, Return to Sender:
Postcard-only Mail Policies in Jails (Easthampton, MA: Prison Policy Initiative, February 7,
2013). Accessed on October 19, 2015 from: http://www.prisonpolicy.org/postcards/. ↩
For example, Echoes of Incarceration is an award-winning documentary initiative produced by
youth with incarcerated parents. In their first film, four youth of incarcerated parents describe how
their parents' incarceration has impacted them: https://www.youtube.com/watch?
v=r0HooqTwh_4&feature=youtu.be. ↩
It is especially difficult for incarcerated people and their families to afford the costs associated
with visits because they are some of the poorest families in this country. Our report, Prisons of
Poverty: Uncovering the pre-incarceration incomes of the imprisoned, found that, in 2014 dollars,
incarcerated people had a median annual income of $19,185 prior to their incarceration, which is
41% less than non-incarcerated people of similar ages. See: Bernadette Rabuy and Daniel Kopf,
Prisons of Poverty: Uncovering the pre-incarceration incomes of the imprisoned (Easthampton,
MA: Prison Policy Initiative, July 9, 2015). Accessed on September 3, 2015 from:
http://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/income.html. ↩
Based on the same dataset as this report, the Bureau of Justice Statistics found that only 42% of
parents of minor children imprisoned in state prison received a personal visit from their children
since admission. Lauren E. Glaze and Laura M. Maruschak, Parents in Prison and Their Minor
Children, (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, August 2008), p 6. Accessed on October
14, 2015 from: http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/pptmc.pdf. ↩
A recent report found 34% of the families studied fell into debt from simply paying for phone calls
and visits with their incarcerated loved ones. See: Saneta deVuono-powell, Chris Schweidler,
Alicia Walters, and Azadeh Zohrabi, Who Pays? The True Cost of Incarceration on Families
(Oakland, CA: Ella Baker Center, Forward Together, Research Action Design, September 2015), p
30. Accessed on September 15, 2015 from:
http://ellabakercenter.org/sites/default/files/downloads/who-pays.pdf. ↩
The Prison Policy Initiative has extensively researched correctional video visitation in the U.S.,
finding that, ironically, while video visitation would be most useful in state prisons given the
remote locations of such facilities, the technology is far more prevalent in local jails.
Unfortunately, local sheriffs and private companies have been replacing in-person visits with video

27.

28.
29.

30.
31.

32.

visits rather than giving families another option to stay in contact. See: Bernadette Rabuy and
Peter Wagner, Screening Out Family Time: The for-profit video visitation industry in prisons and
jails (Easthampton, MA: Prison Policy Initiative, January 2015). Accessed on September 3, 2015
from: http://www.prisonpolicy.org/visitation/. ↩
Les Zaitz, "New technology helps Oregon inmates stay connected," The Oregonian, September 12,
2012. Accessed on September 3, 2015 from: http://www.oregonlive.com/pacific-northwestnews/index.ssf/2012/09/new_technology_helps_oregon_in.html. ↩
See: http://doc.sd.gov/adult/facilities/mdsp/. ↩
Holly Kirby, Locked up and Shipped Away: Interstate Prison Transfers & the Private Prison
Industry (Austin, TX: Grassroots Leadership, November 18, 2013). Accessed on October 14, 2015
from: http://grassrootsleadership.org/locked-up-and-shipped-away. See also: Daniel Rivero,
"These states' prisons are so full that they have to ship inmates thousands of miles away," Fusion,
June 8, 2015. Accessed on October 14, 2015 from: http://fusion.net/story/146671/these-statesprisons-are-so-full-they-have-to-ship-inmates-thousands-of-miles-away/. ↩
More information is available here: http://www.bjs.gov/index.cfm?ty=dcdetail&iid=275. ↩
Lauren E. Glaze and Laura M. Maruschak, Parents in Prison and Their Minor Children,
(Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, August 2008), p 6. Accessed on October 14, 2015
from: http://www.bjs.gov/content/pub/pdf/pptmc.pdf. ↩
Proposed Collection, 80 FR 9749 (Feb 24, 2015). ↩