Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 38, September 20, 2024
a)
Introduction
Frequent communication with family, relatives, friends, and
others concerned with the child shall be encouraged. It is essential to morale,
maintenance of family ties, legal rights, and an eventual healthy reentry into
the community.
b) Minimum
Standards
1) Scope
A child shall be allowed to correspond with
anyone.
2) Incoming Mail
Children shall be permitted to receive an unlimited number of
letters.
A) Incoming mail shall not be
read, censored or reproduced, but shall be opened and examined for contraband
in the presence of the addressee. Packages shall also be examined for
contraband in the presence of the addressee.
B) Cashier checks, money orders, certified
checks or cash shall be recorded in the child's personal property record or
trust fund account indicating the sender, the amount, and the date received.
Such funds will be given to the child unless he/she wants the funds placed in
safekeeping.
C) Incoming letters or
packages containing prohibited items i.e., controlled substances, firearms or
items easily converted for use as a weapon, shall be held for further
inspection and disposition by the superintendent.
i) Prohibited items received shall be handled
with care and labeled with the date of receipt, the name and address of the
sender, the name of the addressee, and the date and names of persons handling
same.
ii) The appropriate law
enforcement agencies shall be notified and the items safeguarded in the event
they are to be used as evidence in criminal proceedings or disciplinary
action.
D) All mail
shall be distributed to children on the day it is received. A released child's
mail shall be forwarded unopened. If no forwarding address is available, mail
shall be returned, unopened, to the sender.
E) A child shall not be allowed to open, read
or deliver another youth's mail.
3) Outgoing Mail
Each child shall be permitted to send, at personal expense, an
unlimited number of letters and packages.
A) Postage shall be provided to indigent
children for at least three letters per week.
B) Postage supplied to children shall not be
transferable.
C) Appropriate
stationery, envelopes, and a writing implement shall be supplied, but children
may use such items as they themselves provide.
D) A program permitting children to send
special messages or greeting cards for anniversaries and birthdays or during
special holidays such as Christmas, Easter, and Mother's Day shall be designed
and implemented. Greeting cards and postage shall be provided indigent children
on request.
E) Children shall
submit outgoing mail in sealed envelopes.
F) Outgoing mail shall not be
opened.
4) Certified or
Registered Mail
Each shelter care facility shall establish procedures for
processing certified or registered mail.
5) Privileged Mail, Incoming
A) Incoming privileged mail may be opened
only for the purpose of verifying the addressee and the addressor and to
ascertain that prohibited items are not enclosed. Mail opening must be in the
presence of the youth.
B)
Privileged mail is mail received from any of the following:
i) Elected or appointed federal or state
officials including any U.S. Senator or Representative; any federal judge or
the clerk of any federal court; the Attorney General of the United States; the
Director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons; the Governor of the State of
Illinois; any Illinois Circuit, Appellate or Supreme Court judge; the Illinois
Attorney General; and any member of the Illinois General Assembly.
ii) The Director of the Department and the
Chief of the Office of Detention and Audit Services.
iii) Any attorney licensed to practice
law.
iv) Legal aid organizations
and any other organization whose official declared purpose is to provide legal
services for youth.
v) Members of
the news media.
6) Disciplinary Denial
Children shall not be denied mail rights for disciplinary
purposes.
7) Release
On release, a child shall be permitted to take all personal
mail.