The Standard Journal

Bill allowing crematorie­s in Georgia to use dissolving chemicals clears Senate

- By Beau Evans Staff Writer Capitol Beat News Service

A bill that would allow crematorie­s in Georgia to use dissolving chemicals along with the usual furnace burning cleared the Georgia Senate at the beginning of last week.

Senate Bill 296 would permit crematorie­s to undertake the process of alkaline hydrolysis, which combines water, alkaline chemicals, pressure and heat to liquify most human remains. The dissolving process breaks down fat and tissues into liquid, leaving behind bone fragments.

Alkaline hydrolysis, or “aquamation”, is used as an alternativ­e to traditiona­l fire-burning furnaces or burials in several states, according to the advocacy group Cremation Associatio­n of North America.

The group describes it as more environmen­tally friendly, a “gentler process.”

State Sen. Bill Heath, the legislatio­n’s sponsor, said he brought it to clarify that Georgia law already permits alkaline hydrolysis on paper but the state board that licenses funeral homes still does not permit it.

Heath, R-Bremen, said he drafted the bill after hearing from a crematory owner who bought equipment able to perform alkaline hydrolysis but was told he could not use it.

“It has been an accepted process,” he said.

Mindy Miller-Moats, a fourth-generation funeral home operator in Tallapoosa, said she purchased a vat to dissolve bodies as a way to give families another option to cremate their loved ones. The process is fast and produces much less energy than combusting fire, she said.

“Given the option, a lot of families do find that this is less abrasive than fire,” MillerMoat­s said at a Senate Regulated Industries and Utilities Committee meeting last week.

Asked about the watery discharge from the dissolved body,

Miller-Moats said the “effluent” produced is made up of harmless compounds like amino acids, sugars, nutrients, salts and soap. Typically, the dissolved water is flushed into an area’s sewage system for disposal, she said.

Many sewage treatment utilities consider the discharge as “a welcome addition” because it can help clean undergroun­d pipes, she added.

“These are all just the basic building blocks of what our bodies are made of,” MillerMoat­s said. “This whole process is taking your body’s natural decomposit­ion process and speeding it up.”

She noted the process is also used by research facilities, veterinary hospitals and pharmaceut­ical companies.

The Georgia Funeral Directors Associatio­n backs the bill and alkaline hydrolysis as a more environmen­tally friendly and efficient cremation process.

“You’re giving the public a choice (and) this is a much cleaner choice,” Hightower said.

Still, Senate Minority Leader Steve Henson, D-Stone Mountain, said he would like to have assurance from state environmen­tal regulators that the water would indeed be clean before it’s sent into any wastewater system.

“My big concern is that I would like to make sure that that water is going to be tested,” Henson said at last week’s committee meeting.

Jacqueline Echols, president of the nonprofit South River Watershed Alliance, agreed funeral homes that dissolve human remains should fall under treatment regulation­s overseen by the state Environmen­tal Protection Division.

On Feb. 3, Henson also tried to tack an amendment onto the bill that would give city and county government­s the ability to set their own rules on licensing crematorie­s, but it failed along party lines.

The bill passed by a 35-10 vote last week. It now heads to the state House.

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Heath
State Sen. Heath

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