N
NCSue
Guest
Yes, it can be difficult to donate things to inmates. Each prison has a different set of rules, each state’s department of corrections has a different set of rules. (I’ve written to inmates in Texas, Florida, Mississippi, Arizona, and North Carolina, and sometimes it makes me a bit nuts trying to remember what the rules are that apply in a certain location…)
Often if you look at the website for the Department of Corrections for your state you can find the rules which apply there. Of course they change with time, and the website may not be current, so you may want to call the prison itself.
The premise is that the regulations are designed to minimize ways that (a) contraband can be smuggled in and (b) weapons can be fashioned. So, for example, some prisons will not allow inmates to receive hardback books as the hardback portion of the book could theoretically be used to make a shiv (a home-made knife of sorts). But there are also some very peculiar rules at some prisons that don’t really seem to make all that much sense. For example, inmates in Mississippi are only allowed to receive four pages printed off the internet at any one time. (I think it’s four - don’t quote me…) And inmates in Arizona can use regular pencils, but not colored ones. Inmates in some states can receive stamps. Others cannot. Some prisons don’t allow inmates to receive mail that has a label stuck on it… even an address label. Others won’t allow an inmate to receive 2 copies of the same picture. Etc., etc.
Your best bet is to contact the individual prison to find out what their requirements are.
By the way, an earlier poster was wanting to make sure that he could restrict his donations so that inmates convicted of certain crimes couldn’t receive them. *(Perhaps he was worried that Christian literature might help the prisoner develop a relationship with God??? As he said, they don’t *deserve repentance, but I guess Jesus didn’t HAVE to die for OUR sins…) I wanted to reiterate what someone added later: books donated to prison “make the rounds”. Inmates may be permitted to keep one or two books in their cell on a somewhat permanent basis, but due to space constraints they can’t keep more than that. So books will be circulated from one inmate to another, usually by means of a “book cart”.
Thanks for your efforts to donate magazines for inmates to read. Hopefully if they read some good, Christian literature, they will have more time to develop their faith.
Often if you look at the website for the Department of Corrections for your state you can find the rules which apply there. Of course they change with time, and the website may not be current, so you may want to call the prison itself.
The premise is that the regulations are designed to minimize ways that (a) contraband can be smuggled in and (b) weapons can be fashioned. So, for example, some prisons will not allow inmates to receive hardback books as the hardback portion of the book could theoretically be used to make a shiv (a home-made knife of sorts). But there are also some very peculiar rules at some prisons that don’t really seem to make all that much sense. For example, inmates in Mississippi are only allowed to receive four pages printed off the internet at any one time. (I think it’s four - don’t quote me…) And inmates in Arizona can use regular pencils, but not colored ones. Inmates in some states can receive stamps. Others cannot. Some prisons don’t allow inmates to receive mail that has a label stuck on it… even an address label. Others won’t allow an inmate to receive 2 copies of the same picture. Etc., etc.
Your best bet is to contact the individual prison to find out what their requirements are.
By the way, an earlier poster was wanting to make sure that he could restrict his donations so that inmates convicted of certain crimes couldn’t receive them. *(Perhaps he was worried that Christian literature might help the prisoner develop a relationship with God??? As he said, they don’t *deserve repentance, but I guess Jesus didn’t HAVE to die for OUR sins…) I wanted to reiterate what someone added later: books donated to prison “make the rounds”. Inmates may be permitted to keep one or two books in their cell on a somewhat permanent basis, but due to space constraints they can’t keep more than that. So books will be circulated from one inmate to another, usually by means of a “book cart”.
Thanks for your efforts to donate magazines for inmates to read. Hopefully if they read some good, Christian literature, they will have more time to develop their faith.