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Q. |
What purpose does a funeral serve? |
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A.
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It is the customary way to recognize death and its
finality. Funerals are recognized rituals for the
living to show respect for the dead and to help
survivors begin the grief process.
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Q. |
What do funeral directors do? |
| A. |
Funeral directors are caregivers and administrators.
They make the arrangements for transportation of the
body, complete all necessary paperwork, and
implement the choices made by the family regarding
the funeral and final disposition of the body.
Funeral directors are listeners, advisors and
supporters. They have experience assisting the
bereaved in coping with death. Funeral directors are
trained to answer questions about grief, recognize
when a person is having difficulty coping, and
recommend sources of professional help. Funeral
directors also link survivors with support groups at
the funeral home or in the community.
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Q. |
Do you have to have a funeral director to bury the dead? |
| A. |
In most states, Maine included, family members may
bury their own dead although regulations vary.
However, most people find it very trying to be
solely responsible for arranging the details and
legal matters surrounding a death.
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Q. |
Why have a public viewing? |
| A. |
Viewing is part of many cultural and ethnic
traditions. Many grief specialists believe that
viewing aids in the grief process by helping the
bereaved recognize the reality of death. Viewing is
encouraged for children, as long as the process is
explained and the activity voluntary.
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Q. |
What is the purpose of embalming? |
| A. |
Embalming sanitizes and preserves the
body, retards the decomposition process, and enhances
the appearance of a body disfigured by traumatic death
or illness. Embalming makes it possible to lengthen the
time between death and the final disposition, thus
allowing family members time to arrange and participate
in the type of service most comforting to them. |
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Q. |
Does a dead body have to be embalmed, according to law? |
| A. |
No. In most cases, embalming is not
required in the state of Maine. It is required when the
family has selected services with an open casket
viewing, transportation by common carrier, or winter
storage/entombment. Services such as immediate cremation
or direct burial do not require embalming. This funeral
home requires embalming for all services having public
viewing. |
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Q. |
Isn't burial space becoming scarce? |
| A. |
While it is true some metropolitan areas have
limited available cemetery space, in most areas of
the country, there is enough space set aside for the
next 50 years without creating new cemeteries. In
addition, land available for new cemeteries is more
than adequate, especially with the increase in
entombment and multi-level grave burial.
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Q. |
Is cremation a substitute for a funeral? |
| A. |
No, cremation is an alternative to
earth burial or entombment for the body's final
disposition and often follows a traditional funeral
service. In fact, according to FTC figures for 1987,
direct cremation occurred in only 3% of deaths. |
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Q. |
Is cremation as a means of disposition increasing? |
| A. |
Yes, but not dramatically. Cremation
was the method of disposition for 29.61 percent of the
deaths in 2004 compared to 24.8 percent in 1999, a 19.4
percent increase, according to the Cremation Association
of America (CANA). In addition, according to the Casket
and Funeral Supply Association, in 2003, 76 percent of
deaths were casketed and had some form of ritual or
ceremony, indicating that not all cremations are direct
disposition. (Source: cremationassociation.org) |
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Q. |
Is it possible to have a traditional funeral if someone
dies of AIDS? |
| A. |
Yes. A person who dies of an
AIDS-related illness is entitled to the same service
options afforded to anyone else. If public viewing is
consistent with local or personal customs, that option
is encouraged. Touching the deceased's face or hands is
perfectly safe. Because the grief experienced by
survivors may include a variety of feelings, survivors
may need even more support than survivors of
non-AIDS-related deaths. |
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Q. |
How much does a funeral cost? |
| A. |
In 2004 the average charge for an
adult, full-service funeral, was $6,500.00. This average
cost included a professional service charge, transfer of
remains, embalming, other preparation, use of viewing
facilities, use of facilities for ceremony, hearse,
limousine, casket, and outer burial container. Cemetery
and monument charges were additional. (Source: NFDA Fact
Sheets; www.nfda.org) |
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Q. |
Has this cost increased significantly? |
| A. |
Funeral costs have increased no
faster than the consumer price index for other consumer
items. In 1994 an average adult full-service funeral
(included items and services listed in previous
question) cast approximately $4455.00. In 2004, the same
full-service funeral cost approximately $6500.00,
according to NFDA Fact Sheets. (www.nfda.org) |
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Q. |
Why are funerals so expensive? |
| A. |
When compared to other major life
cycle events, like births and weddings, funerals are not
expensive. A wedding costs at least three times as much;
but because it is a happy event, wedding costs are
rarely criticized. A funeral home is a 24-hour,
labor-intensive business, with extensive facilities
(viewing rooms, chapels, limousines, hearses, etc.),
these expenses must be factored into the cost of a
funeral. Moreover, the cost of a funeral includes not
only merchandise, like caskets, but the services of a
funeral director in making arrangements; filing
appropriate forms; dealing with doctors, ministers,
florists, newspapers and others; and seeing to all the
necessary details. Contrary to popular belief, funeral
homes are largely family-owned with a modest profit
margin. The statistics below may be helpful in assessing
the true economic picture of a funeral home:
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Family-owned
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85%
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Firm in business for
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63 years
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Average calls/year
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167
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BEFORE tax profit
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11.3%
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(Source: 1995 NFDA Survey of Funeral Home Operations)
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Q. |
What recourse does a consumer have for poor service or
overcharging? |
| A. |
Funeral service is regulated by the
FTC and state licensing boards. In most cases, the
consumer should discuss problems with the funeral
director first. If the dispute cannot be solved by
talking with the funeral director, the consumer may wish
to contact the Funeral Service Consumer Assistance
Program or the State Board of Funeral Service. FSCAP
provides information, mediates disputes, provides
arbitration, and maintains a consumer guarantee fund for
reimbursement of services rendered. (To contact FSCAP,
call 708-827-6337 or 800-662-7666). |
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Q. |
Do funeral directors take advantage of the bereaved? |
| A. |
Funeral directors are caring
individuals who help people deal with a very stressful
time. They serve the same families 80% of the time, and
many have spent most of their lives in the same
community. If they took advantage of bereaved families,
they could not stay in business. The fact that the
average funeral home has been in business over 59 years
shows that most funeral directors respect the wishes of
the bereaved families. |
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Q. |
Is it right to make a profit from death? |
| A. |
Funeral directors look upon their
profession as a service, but it is also a business. Like
any business, funeral homes must make a profit to exist.
As long as the profit is reasonable and the services
rendered are necessary, complete, and satisfactory to
the family, profit is legitimate. |
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Q. |
Don't funeral directors mark caskets up tremendously, at
least 400%? |
| A. |
No. Talking about the mark up on
caskets is really not the point. Most items--clothing,
furniture, jewelry--are marked up as much or more than
caskets. The real question is whether the funeral
director is making an excessive profit, And that answer
is "No." Profits run around 12.5% before taxes -- not
excessive by any standard. |
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Q. |
Who pays for funerals for the indigent? |
| A. |
In most states, some form of public
aid allowances are available from either the state,
county, or city or a combination, though in the state of
Maine this is becoming increasingly more difficult to
obtain. Most funeral directors are aware of the various
benefits and attempt to obtain them for the indigent.
However, funeral directors often absorb costs above and
beyond what is provided by agencies to insure the
deceased a respectable burial. |
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Q. |
What should I do if the death occurs in the middle of
the night or on the weekend? |
| A. |
Simply call our business number. Our
Funeral Directors are available 24 hours a day, seven
days a week. We always have at least 1 Licensed Funeral
Director on call, and our phones are answered by
answering service after hours. |
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Q. |
Will someone come right away? |
| A. |
If you request immediate assistance,
yes. If the family wishes to spend a short time with the
deceased to say good-bye, it's acceptable. Our staff
will come when your time is right for your family. |
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Q. |
If a loved one dies out of state , can the local Funeral
Home still help? |
| A. |
Yes, we can assist you with
out-of-state arrangements, either to transfer the
deceased to another state or from another state. |
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Q. |
So, I've decided on cremation. Can I still have a
funeral or a viewing? |
| A. |
Yes, quite often some sort of viewing
precedes the actual cremation. Your Funeral Home can
assist you with the necessary information for a funeral
with a cremation following or a memorial service. |
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Q. |
What government agencies help defray final expenses? |
| A. |
Our Funeral Directors and staff will
help gather the necessary information to apply for any
applicable financial assistance from Social Security or
Veteran's Administration. We also file claims with life
and/or accident insurance companies on behalf of the
families we serve. |
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