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HB 25-1013

signed

Department of Corrections Visitation Rights

Plain-English Summary

AI-generated

House Bill 25-1013, which has been signed into law, establishes the right for people in Colorado correctional facilities to have visitors. However, it also allows the Department of Corrections to limit or restrict visits under certain circumstances, such as when a person is in restrictive housing, if there are safety concerns, or if required by court orders or investigations. The bill ensures that video visits can supplement but not replace in-person visits and requires the department to make reasonable efforts for inmates to attend funerals or newborn family events virtually or by phone if they give proper notice. This law affects individuals who are confined in correctional facilities and their visitors, providing clearer guidelines on visitation rights while allowing necessary restrictions for security and legal reasons.

Official Summary

The act establishes visitation as a right for a person confined in a correctional facility (confined person). The department of corrections (department) may: Limit visitation for a confined person who is in restrictive housing or as a sanction following a conviction for a class 1 code of penal discipline violation; Reduce, but not eliminate, the number of visits available per week to a confined person as a result of an increase in the person's custody classification level; Temporarily deprive visitation as necessary for facility operations or for the safety of the facility, persons in the facility, and the general public; and Deny or cancel visitation for a confined person at any time as necessary to comply with requirements imposed by a court order, for victim safety, to prevent communication with a co-defendant, to preserve the integrity of a criminal investigation, to comply with treatment protocols, or for any other reason required by law. Video visits may supplement, but must not take the place of, in-person visits when in-person visits are permitted. If a confined person provides the department with reasonable notice that a requested visitation is for virtual attendance at a funeral or during or immediately following the birth of a child in the person's family, the act requires the department to make all reasonable efforts to allow the person to participate in the visitation via virtual attendance, or, if virtual attendance is not possible, via telephone. The department may adopt policies to govern visitations, including policies necessary to allow visitation as part of routine facility operations. The act states that it does not create a private right of action. The act permits a confined person to file a grievance with the department if the confined person alleges deprivation of visitation. The department is required to include information about visitation and grievances in its annual SMART Act hearing. (Note: This summary applies to this bill as enacted.)

Details

Chamber
House
First action
2025-06-04
Latest action
2025-01-08
Last action desc.
Introduced In House - Assigned to Judiciary
OpenStates
View source ↗

Sponsors

Votes

BILL
2025-05-02 · Senate · passYes: 22 · No: 12 · Other:
AMEND
2025-05-02 · Senate · passYes: 34 · No: 0 · Other:
BILL
2025-05-02 · Senate · passYes: 22 · No: 12 · Other:
CONCUR
2025-05-02 · House · passYes: 43 · No: 19 · Other:
REPASS
2025-05-02 · House · passYes: 43 · No: 19 · Other:
BILL
2025-03-26 · House · passYes: 44 · No: 21 · Other: