Showing posts with label imsorrytohear. Show all posts
Showing posts with label imsorrytohear. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Funeral Homes Should Post Prices Online, But They DON'T !!!!

Philadelphia Inquirer, Wednesday, March 30, 2016, Page A10, OPINION:


Philly funeral homes should post prices online

Planning a funeral is extremely difficult, and not just because someone you love has died. The process is chaotic and time-consuming, and having many funeral homes stuck in the pre-Internet age doesn’t help.
If you are like most people, you have never purchased a funeral before, so you have no clue what’s involved. You rarely know your legal rights, the full range of options, or what you do and do not need to buy. Chances are you’ll use a funeral home your family has used before — even if you didn’t like it — or the one nearest your home.
Most people will walk into a funeral home’s for-profit showroom and say, “What do I need?” And because they’re nice and you’re grieving, you believe them when they say, “We’ll take care of everything.” And, chances are, you will naively purchase whatever they suggest.
I know this because my family was one of those consumers back in 2011, passing around the hat to pay for Uncle Rafe’s $10,000 funeral and then for my grandfather later that year.
This process can work out fine, but it doesn’t always. Case in point are the families that unknowingly use funeral homes that don’t keep up with their licensure requirements — or, worse, are legitimately out of business but continue to operate in their communities anyway.
At this point, you may be wondering, what does a valid license for a funeral home or funeral director even mean? Does the license actually protect the consumer? Not really. Pennsylvania doesn’t provide enough resources to actually inspect and oversee the more than 1,600 funeral establishments in the commonwealth.
But even when dealing with reputable, licensed establishments, here’s the real problem: Consumers are stuck researching and organizing an event with an industry that is stuck in 1984.
In 1982, the federal government recognized how vulnerable funeral consumers were and passed a set of laws — called the Funeral Rule — to protect them. Among the protections: Funeral homes must have a general price list that itemizes the costs of all products and services, and they must give a copy to consumers before discussing funeral arrangements. Progress, right? This even standardized pricing to a certain extent, but it also allowed funeral homes to charge a catch-all, non-declinable basic service fee.
Another major flaw is that the rules, passed in ’84 and revised 10 years later, reflect the shopping methods of their time: in person and by phone.
To this day in Philadelphia, you are lucky to find a funeral home with a decent website and even less likely to find one that posts its prices online.
In 2015, the Funeral Consumers Alliance of Greater Philadelphia collected price lists from 86 of the 137 Philadelphia funeral homes through a yearlong effort of calls, emails, and follow-ups. Shockingly, what we learned is that the price of direct cremation ranges from $700 to $4,465 — for the same thing. Embalming ranges from $293 to $3,000. (Of course, the skills of embalmers vary, but those skills are not tied to the prices they’re charging.) The average non-declinable basic service fee is $1,876; that is just the base cost of doing business with a funeral home when you haven’t even purchased any actual services or products yet. (The full survey results are at FCAPhilly.org.)
In a nationally publicized 2015 report by the Funeral Consumers Alliance and Consumer Federation of America assessing ease of access to funeral pricing information, Philadelphia funeral homes proved to be the worst in the nation. Only nine of the 15 surveyed had websites, none had prices online, and three refused to provide prices at all — a violation of federal law. Worse, to obtain a copy of these price lists, it took a minimum of three calls before the information was sent over — by fax.
Hey, funeral homes! How about entering the 21st century and putting your prices online?
Despite multiple requests from consumer groups, the Federal Trade Commission has not sought to update the federal rules. Beyond those rules, most funeral regulations are enacted on a state-by-state basis. So unless lawmakers in Harrisburg take action to require that price lists be posted online, consumers are stuck calling or visiting each funeral home they want information from.
California recognized the difficulties for consumers and now has a law requiring funeral homes with websites to list the goods and services they offer and include a statement that their prices list is available upon request or via a link on the home page.
The effect? In the same 2015 report, 85 percent of the funeral homes surveyed in Orange County, Calif., posted their full price lists, making it exponentially easier for local consumers to do their homework before stepping foot in a funeral home.
Though it’s still not as easy as buying shoes online, it is better than what the rest of the country experiences when shopping for a funeral. California has provided an easy, consumer-friendly measure that allows consumers to educate themselves and protects them from overspending and working with illegitimate businesses.
If the federal and state governments won’t follow California’s lead, it’s up to consumers to improve price transparency and comparison efforts. Call your local funeral home and ask, “Are your prices online? If not, why not?” Let me know what they say.
Rachel Zeldin is the founder and
CEO of I’m Sorry to Hear — Funeral
Planning Online
(www.imsorrytohear.com), a Project Liberty Digital Media incubator company housed at Philadelphia
Media Network, and a board member of the Funeral Consumers Alliance of
Greater Philadelphia. rzeldin@imsorrytohear.com

Friday, July 26, 2013

What Do I Do When A Loved One Dies Away From Home?


Thanks to imsorrytohear:

Help! My Uncle Died in Arizona… What Do I Do When A Loved One Dies Away From Home?
by imsorrytohear
Transportation of Remains via Air



It is stressful enough when a loved one dies, but when a loved one dies away from home there is an added layer of complexity. What is the common process of transporting the deceased home or to the location of the funeral? To get answers to these questions, we spoke with Anne Wladecki, Client Relations Manager at Eagle’s Wings Air (EWA), specialists in air transportation management of human remains, to shed some insight on this topic.

According to Anne, it is unnecessary for the family of the deceased to be directly involved in setting up air transportation of their loved one. She indicates that the first step for the family involved is to contact a funeral home of their choice at the location of where the funeral will take place. This funeral home, known as the Receiving Funeral Home, will do the majority of the coordination on behalf of the family.

The Receiving Funeral Home has the responsibility of coordinating all flights and contacting the Shipping Funeral Home, the funeral home holding the deceased. If the family is familiar with the location where the death occurred, they could request a particular Shipping Funeral Home, otherwise they can ask the Receiving Funeral Home to identify and coordinate with one at the shipping location, including making arrangements for ground transport from the hospital, morgue, assisted living facility, etc. to the Shipping Funeral Home for preparation for air travel.

Human remains are considered to be “specialty cargo” which has limited space on passenger flights. Typically they can only be carried on larger passenger planes, which only allow one or two spaces per flight.

The Receiving Funeral Home will coordinate the date, time, cost, and specific airline being used directly with the airline or with a 3rd party like Eagle’s Wings Air. A family should indicate to the funeral home their preference with regards to costs, timing, and body preparation at the shipping location.

Once these details have been confirmed and costs approved by the family, the Shipping Funeral Home will prepare the body for air transportation. No law requires remains to be embalmed for flight. Therefore, the Shipping Funeral Home will either embalm the body or preserve it for transportation with gel packs or dry ice as requested by the family.

Then the Shipping Funeral Home will transport the body to the airport’s cargo center. Upon arrival at the destination airport, the Receiving Funeral Home will pick up the shipment and bring it back to the funeral home to complete preparations as indicated by the family.

The Receiving Funeral Home or a 3rd party company would coordinate the transportation of your deceased loved one to the location of the funeral home, but families should be aware of a few more details.

Costs: What to Expect
Air transport of remains can be quite costly. Wladecki says it is similar to booking a last minute round-trip flight for a passenger – hundreds of dollars for domestic flights and thousands if international. To assist with the cost, Wladecki advises families to check their travel insurance, if applicable, to see if the cost or part of the cost would be covered by the insurance if the death happened, especially while on vacation or a business trip.

Aside from the cost of the airfare, families should also take into consideration the following costs:

Ground Transport to the airport by the Shipping Funeral Home
Ground Transport from the airport to the Receiving Funeral home
Booking or Service Fees (EWA charges $59 for domestic services and $89 for international, for example)
Key Terms:

Shipping Funeral Home :
The funeral home at the origin location (where the person died). The Shipping Funeral Home is responsible for obtaining, preparing, and tendering  the remains at the airport to be shipped to the Receiving Funeral Home.

Receiving Funeral Home:
The funeral home at the destination where the family is intending for the burial or cremation. Normally the Receiving Funeral Home is appointed first since they will do the majority of the coordination with the airline and the Shipping Funeral Home. They will likely consolidate the costs for the family, so the family only has to pay one funeral home.

About Eagle’s Wings Air:
Eagle’s Wings Air is the leading provider of air transportation management for North American funeral directors. Eagle’s Wings Air is a 3rd party service that works directly with funeral homes to assist in the arrangement of flight services for human remains. Eagle’s Wings Air works with all the different airlines. To assist the funeral director, EWA researches and books flights, coordinates transfer flights, and finds the best routing for the funeral homes on behalf of the families they serve.