Quizzes & Puzzles40 mins ago
Funeral
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Bizarre question driven by curiosity. Two people house share but are not related or partners. One becomes ill, dies at home and doesn't need a post mortem. GP attends and signs relevant documents confirming death.
He has no family. The other does not want the cost or responsibility of arranging the funeral. If the dead man has no assets the council will pay but the body is still in the house. How does it get removed and where to? As far as I know if the surviving housemate calls an undertaker to remove the body he will be responsible for the funeral. Anyone know?
He has no family. The other does not want the cost or responsibility of arranging the funeral. If the dead man has no assets the council will pay but the body is still in the house. How does it get removed and where to? As far as I know if the surviving housemate calls an undertaker to remove the body he will be responsible for the funeral. Anyone know?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.just call the plod initially and they'll arrange the body removal to the local morgue. In fact that goes anyway ragardless. No one actually has to pay for a funeral ever, you just do not claim the body. The authorities and underatakers use emotional blackmail usually but in reality they can't force anyone to pay for anything.
its says here to call a funeral director but I'd make sure you don't agree or sign anything:
https:/ /www.be reaveme ntadvic e.org/t opics/w hat-to- do-when -someon e-dies/ at-home -or-in- a-care- home/
https:/
Ha ha. A funeral director would usually refuse unless somebody agreed to pay for the removal and storage at the very least.
It's a conundrum and it must happen.
I got thinking about this because of the adverts for direct to crem funerals. Really, if that is what you are going to settle for you might as well get the council to do it for nothing
It's a conundrum and it must happen.
I got thinking about this because of the adverts for direct to crem funerals. Really, if that is what you are going to settle for you might as well get the council to do it for nothing
In my case I phoned the funeral director. What I am saying is that as well as certifying death, the GP made sure that I knew what to do so in the OP's circs, the survivor could ask the GP who certified the death what they should do. Its my experience from working in the NHS, that councils have at least one contract/arrangement with a local undertaker and the process is pretty quick once they are made aware...but of course we were a hospital and no possibility of emotional pressure.
So the housemate would have to phone the council. If my hypothetical man had died on the street or in hospital he would have been taken to the morgue. If nobody claimed him the council would eventually take responsibility when they had exhausted every means of tracing next of kin and the dead man's assets. This can take ages and they are very reluctant to take on the cost - they will try and guilt trip any remote next of kin in to paying for the funeral (rightly so, really - why should you and I pay for a stranger's funeral if his next of kin can pay but won't?).
I would be very interested to hear a real experience of somebody who has been in this situation. How to persuade a funeral director to take a body when he isn't been paid by the person asking (typically £200 to remove a body plus storage by the day but more if they don't get the funeral) or how to persuade the council to take a body they don't want.
Another question related. A council funeral (pauper's funeral) has to include a short service either at the crematorium or graveside where anyone who wishes to can attend. These 'direct to crem' funeral providers do not allow for this - it keep the costs down - and the crematoria can be hundreds of miles away from the home of the dead person. Will the council be allowed to save money by scrapping the service?
I would be very interested to hear a real experience of somebody who has been in this situation. How to persuade a funeral director to take a body when he isn't been paid by the person asking (typically £200 to remove a body plus storage by the day but more if they don't get the funeral) or how to persuade the council to take a body they don't want.
Another question related. A council funeral (pauper's funeral) has to include a short service either at the crematorium or graveside where anyone who wishes to can attend. These 'direct to crem' funeral providers do not allow for this - it keep the costs down - and the crematoria can be hundreds of miles away from the home of the dead person. Will the council be allowed to save money by scrapping the service?
Yes it's one of the few things which local authorities seem to deal with in the first instance (instead of their usual stock-in-trade response of "Sorry, the council can't help you with that. What is it you want?")
I had experience of this when a neighbour of an elderly relative died in just those circumstances (no relatives, no friends, no funds). The LA took control of the situation immediately and briefed a funeral director to collect the deceased and a funeral was arranged, paid for by the LA.
I had experience of this when a neighbour of an elderly relative died in just those circumstances (no relatives, no friends, no funds). The LA took control of the situation immediately and briefed a funeral director to collect the deceased and a funeral was arranged, paid for by the LA.
//I would be very interested to hear a real experience of somebody who has been in this situation. How to persuade a funeral director to take a body when he isn't been paid by the person asking (typically £200 to remove a body plus storage by the day but more if they don't get the funeral) or how to persuade the council to take a body they don't want.//
I didn't have to do any of that. I simply contacted the LA and they did all the persuading.
I didn't have to do any of that. I simply contacted the LA and they did all the persuading.