ASTM Committee plans proposed standards for visitation booths.

Press Release Summary:



ASTM International Committee F33 on Detention and Correctional Facilities seeks interested parties to join development of proposed standards for visitation booths in correctional facilities. Standard to be developed by said committee will answer 2 main challenges: creating area capable of allowing meaningful interaction, and making this area secure enough to withstand potential vandalism and other abuse that could result from stressful communications.



Original Press Release:



ASTM Detention and Correctional Facilities Committee Plans Proposed Standards for Visitation Booths



ASTM International Committee F33 on Detention and Correctional Facilities is seeking all interested parties to join in the development of proposed standards for visitation booths in correctional facilities.



The committee will be developing standards that will answer two main challenges of designing effective visiting booths:

• Creating an area that will allow for meaningful interaction between an incarcerated individual and his or her family and friends; and

• Making this area secure enough to withstand potential vandalism and other abuse that could result from stressful communications occurring within visiting booths.



Paul Whitaker, an F33 member and manager, security architecture, Rosser Justice Systems, says that advances in technology have furthered the need for standards for visiting booths. “Now that electronic visiting is the customary approach, manufacturers have introduced modular cubicles for this purpose,” says Whitaker. “A performancebased testing standard is needed to assure fair comparison of the different products now available.”



Technology employed for visiting rooms increasingly includes video, with some centers replacing the security glass/headset design with monitors positioned on either side of a barrier. Other systems use the Internet to provide the connection between the inmates and visitors using computers or smart devices. “Key issues in this area include intelligibility of the audio and the quality of the video image,” says Mike Retford, vice president and director, justice practice, at architecture firm HOK. “In addition, the equipment is expensive, and in systems that offer two-way online communication between the inmate and offsite visitors, the facility can only control one side of the equation.”



According to Retford, proposed new standards planned by F33 will address performance parameters for video systems. These standards will give architects, specifiers and correctional facility administrators a greater level of assurance that systems will provide necessary audio and visual quality.



F33 will officially launch its standards developing activity on visiting booths during its meetings in conjunction with the American Correctional Association 144th Congress on Correction in Salt Lake City, Utah, on Aug. 1520.



To purchase ASTM standards, visit www.astm.org and search by the standard designation, or contact ASTM Customer Relations (phone: 877909ASTM; sales@astm.org). ASTM International welcomes participation in the development of its standards. For more information on becoming an ASTM member, visit www.astm.org/JOIN.



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ASTM Committee F33 Next Meeting: Aug. 1520, in conjunction with the American Correctional Association 144 Congress of Correction, Salt Lake City, Utah



Technical Contact: Paul Whitaker, Rosser International, Atlanta, Ga., Phone: 404-888-6941; pwhitaker@rosser.com



ASTM Staff Contact: Joseph Hugo, Phone: 610-832-9740; jhugo@astm.org

ASTM PR Contact: Barbara Schindler, Phone: 610-832-9603; bschindl@astm.org

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