Frequent Questions
Click on the questions below to reveal each respective answer.
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What services do funeral directors perform?
A Funeral Director's role is to assist grieving families in various ways to help them through the loss of a loved one. A funeral director provides bereavement and consolation services for the living, in addition to making arrangements for the cremation, burial, and memorial services for the deceased. He fulfills the role of funeral arranger, funeral director, funeral attendant, and embalmer.
The following list is not all-inclusive, but describes some of the major tasks of a funeral director:
- Patient transfer of the deceased from the place of death to the funeral home
- Professional care of the deceased, including embalming, casketing, and cosmetology
- Consulting with family to make arrangements for the Life Celebration Funeral or Cremation Service
- Filing certificates, permits, and other required forms
- Obtaining copies of the death certificate
- Arrangements with the cemetery, crematory, or other places of final disposition
- Assists the family with creating and publishing the obituary
- Arrangements for clergy, music, flowers, transportation, pallbearers, and special fraternal or military services
- Directs the Life Celebration Funeral or Cremation Service
- Assists the family with death-related claims, including Social Security, VA insurance, grief counseling
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What is the purpose of a public Celebration of Life Service?
- When a loved one passes, a public Celebration of Life Service gives us the opportunity to grieve our loss, share in solidarity, and gain strength from others who are experiencing the same loss. Most individuals do not realize that in order to begin a new healthy walk down the path of their own lives, they must begin to grieve and heal in a shared environment with family and friends. You, your family, and your loved ones' coworkers all need an opportunity to grieve and heal.
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Can you still have a funeral if you choose cremation?
Yes, cremation or burial is merely the disposition of the body. Funeral services are to honor and remember your loved one, regardless of disposition.
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Can I plan in advance if I choose cremation?
Pre-arranging funeral services can be done regardless of the final disposition. Pre-arranging is simply recording your wishes with the funeral home and prefunding if you choose to do so.
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What information should I bring to the arrangement conference?
- Advance Directives - If the deceased left any written advance directives concerning the disposition of his remains and memorialization, you need to bring them with you. These instructions may be found in a will, or there may be a formally witnessed disposition directive, funeral pre-arrangements, or a pre-need contract.
- Military Discharge Papers
- Details on any cemetery property owned by the deceased or the family (grave plot, columbarium space, etc.)
- Recent photograph of the deceased and any personal effects that you wish to be included in the viewing or burial
- Specific information on the deceased:
- Full legal name
- Address
- Marital status
- Social Security number
- Date of birth
- Place of birth (city and state)
- Educational history (number of years of schooling)
- Armed Forces service dates and serial number
- Occupation or profession
- Parent's names, including mother's maiden name
- Next of kin and other survivors