Visiting is a privilege which allows incarcerated individuals to maintain and strengthen relationships with family members and friends. Though visits are encouraged, institutions' space, schedules, personnel constraints, treatment considerations, or other safety and security issues of the institutions and their operations may result in limiting the number and length of visits. Visitation is additionally governed by the provisions of department of corrections policy OP-MTV-04.
"Application" means a written application identifying the visitor and the visitor's relationship to the incarcerated individual.
"Background investigation" means the process by which central visiting authority staff verify the accuracy of a visitor's application for any reason.
"Central visiting authority" or "CVA" means the department office that conducts the visitor application approval process.
"Extended family" means the incarcerated individual's aunts, uncles, nieces, nephews, cousins, great-grandparents, great-grandchildren, and in-laws.
"Group" means a family unit (e.g., aunt, uncle and minor nieces and nephews) residing at the same address.
"Immediate family" means an incarcerated individual's spouse, mother, father, sister, brother, child, grandparent, grandchild (when minors become adults, they will be required to complete the formal visiting application process), established legal guardian or other who acted in place of parents, and step-or half-relation if the step- or half-relation and the incarcerated individual were raised as cohabiting siblings.
"Incarcerated individual" means a person who has been committed to the custody of the department of corrections or to a judicial district department of correctional services.
"Personal search" means a pat-down search on top of the visitor's clothes or the nonintrusive use of an electronic search process.
"Visiting list" means the screened list of approved visitors with authorized visiting privileges at all department of corrections institutions.
Attorneys shall present proof of identity before the start of the visit. The incarcerated individual must express a desire to visit with an attorney before the attorney will be admitted. Attorney visits shall be during normal visiting hours unless a special visit has been requested by the incarcerated individual and approved by the warden or designee prior to the visit.
An attorney testing positive by an electronic detection device may be required to visit without direct contact.
Ministers shall present proof of identity before the start of the visit. The incarcerated individual must express a desire to visit with a minister before the minister will be admitted. Minister visits shall be during normal visiting hours unless a special visit has been requested by the incarcerated individual and approved by the warden or designee prior to the visit.
A minister testing positive by an electronic detection device may be required to visit without direct contact.
Incarcerated individuals may request reconsideration of denied visitors six months after resolution of the reason for denial or when approved by the warden or designee or institutional deputy director.
This rule is intended to implement Iowa Code section 904.512.
Iowa Admin. Code r. 201-20.3