Baltimore Sun

NYC shortens deadline for claiming the dead

- By Michael R. Sisak and John Minchillo

NEW YORK — As New York City deals with a mounting coronaviru­s death toll and dwindling morgue space, the city has shortened the amount of time it will hold unclaimed remains before they are buried in the city’s public cemetery.

Under the new policy, the medical examiner’s office will keep bodies in storage for just 14 days before they’re buried in the city’s potter’s field on Hart Island.

Normally, about 25 bodies a week are interred on the island, mostly for people whose families can’t afford a funeral, or who go unclaimed by relatives.

In recent days, though, burial operations have increased from one day a week to five days a week, with around 24 burials each day, said Department of Correction spokesman Jason Kersten.

Aerial images taken Thursday by the Associated Press captured workers digging graves on the island, a one-mile, limitedacc­ess strip off the Bronx that’s the final resting place for more than a million mostly indigent New Yorkers.

About 40 caskets were lined up for burial on the island on Thursday, and two fresh trenches have been dug in recent days.

Interments are typically done by inmates from the city’s Rikers Island jail complex, but during the coronaviru­s pandemic the job has been taken over by contractor­s.

City officials haven’t explained whether the increase in burials is due to pressure on mortuaries to dispose of bodies more quickly. The virus has been killing hundreds of New York City residents each day this week.

Overwhelme­d hospitals have been placing bodies in refrigerat­ed trucks parked outside their doors.

Mayor Bill de Blasio said this week officials were looking into temporaril­y burying coronaviru­s victims on Hart Island if morgues and temporary storage units fill up.

The Democratic mayor told TV station NY1 that under such a contingenc­y plan bodies of COVID-19 victims would be buried individual­ly — not in mass graves — so families could later reclaim them.

A spokeswoma­n for the medical examiner’s office said Thursday that it “does not currently anticipate reaching morgue capacity.”

“However, as the mayor has said, the city may explore the option of temporary burials in Hart Island if necessary,” said the spokeswoma­n, Aja Worthy-Davis.

De Blasio has said no inmate labor will be used for the temporary burial of coronaviru­s victims.

Thecity’s 2008 Pandemic Influenza Surge Plan states that Hart Island would be used as a temporary burial site in the event the death toll reaches the tens of thousands and other storage is full.

AP video journalist Robert Bumsted contribute­d to this report.

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