Print

Fresh criticism for the funeral industry

By
Posted 8:08AM on Sunday 28th April 2002 ( 23 years ago )
WASHINGTON - &#34;Some people like to drive Volkswagens, and some people like to drive Mercedes,&#34; the funeral director told Barbara Osborne when she sent her Mercedes-driving father off in style, in a top-of-the-line copper casket, when he died of a stroke.<br> <br> But Osborne found she had bought a junker instead when the Father&#39;s Day flowers couldn&#39;t cover the odor coming from Billy Mitchell&#39;s coffin at a Brookhaven, Miss., mortuary that was keeping him until his mausoleum was prepared. Five years and many lawyers and counselors later, Osborne told a congressional hearing Friday that she is a sadder but wiser consumer.<br> <br> Grisly discoveries of hundreds of bodies scattered at a Georgia crematory and reports of irregularities and illegalities elsewhere have Congress looking into whether to expand the federal role overseeing the $14 billion-a-year funeral business.<br> <br> The average funeral cost $6,130 for each of the 2.5 million Americans who died last year.<br> <br> Rev. Henry Wasielewski is a Catholic priest who founded the nonprofit Interfaith Funeral Information Committee, in Phoenix, Ariz., to let families comparison shop. Wasielewski&#39;s Web site, Funerals and Ripoffs, lists wholesale prices and profit margins on caskets and other death-industry wares.<br> <br> Not since Jessica Mitford&#39;s &#34;American Way of Death,&#34; a 1960s best seller that exposed U.S. burial practices as an &#34;expensive practical joke&#34; on the public, has the industry come under such intense attack.<br> <br> In recent months:<br> <br> - Georgia officials brought 266 criminal charges against Brent Marsh in connection with the discovery of 339 corpses at his Tri-State Crematory in Noble.<br> <br> - California prosecutors charged Riverside crematory operator Michael Francis Brown with 156 counts for unauthorized sale of body parts for medical research through another Brown-owned business, Bio-Tech Anatomical.<br> <br> - Tennessee authorities investigated complaints that bone fragments and casket parts were found at a fresh grave at Mount Carmel-Hollywood Cemetery in Memphis.<br> <br> - Florida authorities probed charges that mortuary students at Lynn University in Boca Raton embalmed people in violation of family preferences and religious practices.<br> <br> - Reports of bodies buried in the wrong graves and scattered in nearby woods at two Menorah Gardens & Funeral Cemeteries in Florida brought in state investigators atop class-action suits against cemetery owner Service Corp. International. The $1.6 billion Texas firm has 3,188 mortuaries and 485 cemeteries in the United States and abroad.<br> <br> &#34;These atrocities must end now,&#34; says Rep. Mark Foley, R-Fla., whose district includes the Menorah Gardens sites. Foley has launched a congressional General Accounting Office investigation into whether states&#39; laws are sufficient to bring funeral industry malefactors to justice and - if not - what the federal role should be.<br> <br> Eileen Harrington oversees the Federal Trade Commission&#39;s funeral rule. She says state criminal charges are the appropriate course in &#34;outrageous incidents,&#34; not the cease-and-desist orders and other civil sanctions that the FTC can issue.<br> <br> Still, her agency has spent the last three years studying whether to update the funeral rule to reach the one-stop shopping services, for everything from burial insurance to gravestones, sold by Service Corp. International and other global players.<br> <br> The funeral rule - an object of intense controversy and tight congressional control since it took effect in 1984 - requires funeral homes to give customers detailed pricing on products and services. But it doesn&#39;t cover cemeteries, crematories or other funeral merchandisers, including firms that sell caskets and cemetery plots.<br> <br> Harrington says the industry and its congressional allies fought expanded FTC oversight &#34;pretty much every step of the way,&#34; leaving the agency with few resources to police an industry that people turn to at their most vulnerable time.<br> <br> Robert Vandenbergh, the Clinton Township, Mich., funeral director who heads the 14,000-member National Funeral Directors Association, sees a need for tighter federal and state rules and licensing requirements when many states have none. &#34;We have to restore the public&#39;s trust,&#34; he says.<br> <br> But Osborne, who finally got admissions that top-of-the-line sealed metal caskets don&#39;t protect loved ones against nature, says consumers can&#39;t be too trusting. She counsels: Buriers, beware. <br> <br>

http://accesswdun.com/article/2002/4/195388

© Copyright 2015 AccessNorthGa.com All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed without permission.