The Green Burial Council recognizes the importance of working collaboratively with local communities and their governments to ensure safe, sustainable burial options for diverse populations. The burial industry, and the Green Burial Council specifically, relies on scientifically proven methods and rigorous industry standards to ensure that the services and products being offered protect both the environment and the client’s safety.
In the last year, there have been attempts to ban or otherwise delay the opening of cemeteries that practice green, natural, and/or conservation burial. In Brooks Township, Michigan, the Township Board recently passed the “Cemetery Ordinance” which bans any new cemeteries. This was passed in an apparent reaction to the anticipated opening of West Michigan Burial Forest, a local conservation cemetery. Spurred by a small group of residents with misinformed concerns about water contamination and other hazards, the Township has taken a strong stance against the lawful opening of businesses that serve their own constituents. Our organization sees this as not only an infringement on the rights of our fellow citizens, but as a true degradation of what local government stands for. It is the duty of elected officials to act in the best interest of their constituents, protecting them from malicious actors and avoidable environmental harms. It is also the duty of elected officials to see past misinformation and to consult appropriate specialists on topics outside of their own expertise. We believe that Brooks Township’s ordinance stands on a weak foundation of misinformation about green burial’s negative impact on soil and water, and other similar fears. Though individuals may experience genuine trepidation about a naturally interred body’s impact on their environment, local governments can easily find scientific evidence proving no such impact when burial practices are performed according to industry standards. This is not new science: “green burial” is a relatively new term for an ancient practice. Certain religious customs have always practiced a form of “green” burial. Both Jewish and Muslim faiths do not typically utilize embalming, cremation, or nonbiodegradable materials in their burial traditions. For local governments to create reactionary policies against cemeteries that offer green burial is to support cultural incompetence, disrespecting the needs and rights of their own constituents. Furthermore, banning any cemetery—conventional or green—poses a threat to public health for the safe disposition of human remains. Grave site space is limited by the borders of existing cemetery properties, the expansion of which is necessary due to community demand. It is the duty of local governments to work with the funeral industry to ensure there are professional funeral and cemetery businesses available to serve their community, not only for public health, but to meet the diverse needs of their constituency at the end of life, depending on their cultural and religious beliefs. The Green Burial Council takes a strong stance against local governments creating policy or passing ordinances based on incorrect beliefs about natural burial practices. Doing so indicates a lack of respect for the proven science of the industry and a willingness to align with belief systems that disrespect the religious and cultural practices of their own constituents. |
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February 2024
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