BridgeTheBars

CDCR-sourced visiting logistics — confirm live status before travel.

Mailroom Rulebook

How to send letters without accidentally getting them delayed, rejected, or returned.

Core rule: mail the person by full name, CDCR number, institution name, and housing/P.O. Box if known. CDCR says incoming letters are opened and inspected for contraband before forwarding.

Use this when

You are sending a first letter, photos, kid drawings, greeting cards, or mail after a transfer.

Highest-risk mistake

Mailing to an old facility or adding stickers, perfume, glitter, tape decorations, glued pieces, or anything that looks altered.

Before mailing important items

Confirm the person’s CDCR number, current facility, and housing/P.O. Box if known. Take a photo of the envelope before sending.

Facility-specific limits

Photo count, ink/color rules, card stock, and drawings may need mailroom confirmation before you send a large batch.

What to put on the envelope

Safe family-mail habits

Photos and children’s drawings

CDCR’s public family contact page confirms mail is inspected, but many detailed photo/drawing limits are handled through prison mailroom practice and current regulations. Before sending anything important, confirm with the facility mailroom or visiting staff.

Do not publish facility-specific mailroom limits unless confirmed. Ink colors, photo quantity, card stock, and drawing rules may be enforced differently by mailrooms and can change.

Mailroom confirmation script

Hello, I’m calling to confirm current mailroom rules before I send something. The person is housed at [facility/housing if known]. Can you confirm the correct mailing address, whether photos or children’s drawings are allowed, and whether there are any current restrictions on ink color, card stock, stickers, or quantity?

Official sources