Veterans Day invariably results in a few newspaper articles similar to the one written about the Pittston City Cemetery. Out of respect for veterans’ graves, this small Pennsylvania town is seeking volunteers to provide care to its cemetery. Budget cuts and personnel cuts have left Pittston without the resources to provide maintenance to the
cemetery
But, I was going to pay it back..
Death care regulators seem to believe that the majority of funeral home and cemetery operators are honest and well intended. But, the regulators must contend with the occasional operator who views trust funds as their own. Before taking offense with the regulator’s skepticism, operators need to reflect on the arrogance of operators such as those reflected in a…
Third time’s the Charm: Preneed Legislation
The old axiom was that it would take three consecutive legislative sessions to get a preneed bill passed. If Missouri and Illinois are indicators of the current preneed reform movement, the charm may be based not on attempts but actual bills passed by the legislature.
The Illinois Comptroller’s proposal for preneed reform, SB1682, is progressing…
Missouri Memorial Sales and Chapter 436
For the past fifteen years or so, Missouri cemeteries could sell markers and memorials on a preneed basis without making delivery of the marker, or depositing purchaser payments into a trust. RSMo. Section 214.387 authorized cemeteries to use a segregated account to hold an amount equal to 110% of the marker’s wholesale cost. If the…
Cemetery Preneed Oversight: the bucket factor
Recent cemetery failures are causing regulators from Illinois, Missouri and Kansas to take a closer look at the oversight provided for preneed sales of vaults, markers, urns and burial services.
Cemetery preneed is a different animal for that offered by funeral homes. As Mr. Newcomer suggested to a reporter, the big difference between the…
Another factor in the rising costs of death care: regulation
What transpired over the years at Burr Oak Cemetery is an atrocity. Hundreds of grave spaces have been desecrated, causing extreme emotional distress to all families having a loved one buried at the cemetery.
The demand for action has been intense, and Illinois politicians have responded with legislative proposals to improve oversight of cemeteries.
Rules are Rules
Rules and regulations provide an important framework for the operation and maintenance of a cemetery. However, cemeteries should retain the flexibility to revise their rules to adapt to changes in operations, business and customs. It’s difficult to understand why a cemetery would risk complaints and the prospect of losing business by rigidly adhering to a set…
My way, or the highway: reasonable cemetery rules
Like homeowner’s covenants, ownership of an interment right in a burial space comes subject to the cemetery’s published rules. Cemetery rules are used to regulate such issues as the planting of trees and shrubs, establishing uniform requirements for markers, the removal of decorations, and a transfer of the interment right. Consequently, it’s common for states…
Preneed Task Forces
Like the Swine Flu, a preneed virus has been spreading across the Midwest. Looking for a cure, state legislators and regulators have been forming research teams. It all started last summer, with Missouri’s Chapter 436 (funeral) working group and Chapter 214 (cemetery) working group. Now, Illinois is establishing a preneed task force, and Kansas…
Preneed Salesmen: calling the kettle black
I learned the preneed business from an organization that used the term “preneed counselor”. Consumer advocates, and many funeral directors, rail at that characterization, and insist a salesman is a salesman, no matter what you call them.
For purposes of debate, I would agree that all preneed counselors are salesmen. However, not all preneed salesmen…