Dayton Daily News

Funeral homes having difficulty taking care of unclaimed dead

- By Alanna Durkin Richer

Who WORCESTER, MASS. — takes care of the unclaimed dead, the people who were homeless or estranged from family members, or who outlived all their kin, and left no assets behind?

The answer is usually funeral homes that get reimbursed by state or local government­s for the cost of cremation or burial. But payments are not keeping up with ever-rising expenses in some places, like Massachuse­tts, meaning the number of funeral homes willing to shoulder the burden is dwindling. In West Virginia, drug overdose victims have used up nearly all the money set aside for the unclaimed dead.

“These are human beings, someone’s mother, father, sister, brother,” said Peter Stefan, a funeral director in his 70s who buries dozens of unclaimed bodies a year in central Massachuse­tts. “What do you do with these people? If I leave this place this way, the poor won’t have too many options.”

The $1,110 reimbursem­ent for funeral directors who bury the indigent and unclaimed in Massachuse­tts hasn’t risen in 35 years. The total cost for their time, the casket, transporta­tion of the corpse and a burial plot can be double that, they say.

Cremation is cheaper, but that’s impossible if, as is required in some places including Massachuse­tts, funeral directors can’t find kin to sign off. That leaves them scrambling to find discounts or covering some costs themselves.

“As long as you have two or three funeral homes that are willing to do this, it’s not a problem,” said Robert Lawler, a Boston funeral director who buries about 100 unclaimed bodies a year. “But what happens when we decide we can’t do it anymore?”

Directors recently became eligible for an extra $1,000 if they accept bodies from the Massachuse­tts medical examiner’s office, which investigat­es suicides and suspicious and accidental deaths. But that accounts only for some bodies.

About 15 states provide some funding for unclaimed body burials or cremations, while the rest have pushed the cost to local government­s, said Scott Gilligan, general counsel for the National Funeral Directors Associatio­n.

Ohio, for example, used to pay $750 before shifting the burden to local government­s. Now, some communitie­s offer a set fee, while some smaller towns often won’t even budget for it and funeral directors have to fight to just get paid $350, Gilligan said. “A lot of times, they just do it as good citizens,” he said.

In West Virginia, there is no money for the cremation or burial of the poor and unclaimed. The state fund that pays for them ran out of money because of drug overdose deaths, said Robert Kimes, executive director of the state funeral directors associatio­n.

Directors who bury the indigent and unclaimed from March on will have to try recouping money from the state later, but there’s no guarantee, Kimes said. Lawmakers are considerin­g lowering the $1,250 payment to $1,000 but doing away with some things funeral homes pay for, like a vault, to make the fund last longer, he said.

In northweste­rn Georgia’s Floyd County, Coroner Gene Proctor last year was calling five or six funeral homes every time he had an unclaimed body before he could find one willing to bury it for the $1,250 the county provided.

“I couldn’t blame them because ... here I am asking them to cost themselves money,” said Proctor.

He recently persuaded the county to pass an ordinance that provides for the cremation of the unclaimed. Now, funeral homes get $750, and every director in the county is stepping forward, he said.

In Massachuse­tts, Stefan wants lawmakers to require local health boards to approve cremation when relatives don’t come forward within 30 days. He and his supporters say they believe it would make more funeral homes willing to help out with abandoned bodies.

 ?? STEPHAN SAVOIA / AP ?? Peter Stefan, funeral director and proprietor of the Graham Putnam & Mahoney Funeral Parlor in Worcester, Mass., stands in front of shelving holding the cremated remains of unclaimed bodies dating back more then a decade in the basement of the funeral...
STEPHAN SAVOIA / AP Peter Stefan, funeral director and proprietor of the Graham Putnam & Mahoney Funeral Parlor in Worcester, Mass., stands in front of shelving holding the cremated remains of unclaimed bodies dating back more then a decade in the basement of the funeral...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States