Maryland Attorney General Opinion 108OAG121

CourtMaryland Attorney General Reports
DecidedDecember 21, 2023
Docket108OAG121
StatusPublished

This text of Maryland Attorney General Opinion 108OAG121 (Maryland Attorney General Opinion 108OAG121) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Maryland Attorney General Reports primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Attorney General Opinion 108OAG121, (Md. 2023).

Opinion

Gen. 121] 121

HEALTH BOARD OF MORTICIANS – HEALTH OCCUPATIONS – CREMATION – WHETHER THE BOARD OF MORTICIANS AND OFFICE OF CEMETERY OVERSIGHT HAVE AUTHORITY UNDER EXISTING LAW TO LICENSE ALKALINE HYDROLYSIS AS A TYPE OF CREMATION TO DISPOSE OF HUMAN REMAINS December 21, 2023

The Honorable Anne R. Kaiser Maryland House of Delegates

State law requires two funerary agencies—the Board of Morticians and Funeral Directors (“Board of Morticians”) and the Office of Cemetery Oversight (“Cemetery Office”)—to regulate and license facilities in which human bodies are disposed of by cremation. You have asked whether the existing statutory authority of these agencies over cremation services also grants them the authority to regulate and license the use of an alternative technology called alkaline hydrolysis to dispose of human bodies.

For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the disposal of a human body by alkaline hydrolysis is generally illegal in Maryland and that the funerary agencies therefore do not have authority to regulate, license, or otherwise permit the use of this technology. The Health-General Article prohibits the disposal of human bodies except by certain enumerated methods. Alkaline hydrolysis is not one of the enumerated methods. And while the funerary agencies have a statutory responsibility to regulate “cremation,” their governing statutes define “cremation” in a way that excludes alkaline hydrolysis.1

1 We received two sets of comments on this opinion request, both in support of the legality of alkaline hydrolysis under current State law. Letter from Chris Palmer, Vice President, Funeral Consumers Alliance of Maryland and Environs, et al., to Patrick B. Hughes, Chief Counsel for Opinions & Advice (Dec. 1, 2023) (“FCAME Comments”); Letter from Adrian R. Gardner, Co-Founder, Green Legacy Brands LLC, to Patrick B. Hughes, Chief Counsel for Opinions & Advice (Dec. 1, 2023) (“Green Legacy Comments”). We thank the commenters for their views, which we have considered carefully. 122 [108 Op. Att’y I Background

Alkaline hydrolysis, sometimes called “liquid cremation” or “aquamation,” reduces a dead body to bone fragments by dissolving it in a solution of water and alkaline chemicals. See Cremation Ass’n of N. Am., Alkaline Hydrolysis, https://www.cremationassociation.org/page/alkalinehydrolysis (last visited Dec. 19, 2023) (“CANA Alkaline Hydrolysis Page”); Philip R. Olson, Flush and Bone: Funeralizing Alkaline Hydrolysis in the United States, 39 Sci., Tech., & Human Values 666, 667-68 (2014). The body is placed into an airtight chamber with this liquid solution. To speed up the process by which the chemicals dissolve the body, pressure and heat—in the range of 200 to 300 degrees Fahrenheit—are typically applied to the contents of the chamber. CANA Alkaline Hydrolysis Page; H. Leon Thacker, Alkaline Hydrolysis 1, in Nat’l Agric. Biosecurity Ctr. Consortium, Carcass Disposal: A Comprehensive Review (2004). The process takes anywhere from three to sixteen hours, depending on the amount of heat and pressure used. CANA Alkaline Hydrolysis Page; Olson, supra, at 668, 686. The dissolution process yields a substantial amount of liquid that is commonly referred to in technical literature as a “sterile effluent” and that is typically discharged into wastewater systems. Olson, supra, at 667-68; Thacker, supra, at 1; CANA Alkaline Hydrolysis Page. The bone fragments that remain after the process is complete are pulverized with a device called a cremulator and returned to the next of kin in an urn. Kent Hansen, Choosing to Be Flushed Away, 5 Est. Plan. & Community Prop. L.J. 145, 150 (2012); CANA Alkaline Hydrolysis Page. Alkaline hydrolysis is often described as an “environmentally friendly” method of disposing of human remains. CANA Alkaline Hydrolysis Page. It does not emit pollutants into the air, and it uses less energy and produces less carbon than burial or traditional cremation. Id.; cf. Olson, supra, at 678-79 (analyzing the environmental and public health impacts of alkaline hydrolysis).

By contrast, in the traditional cremation process—sometimes called “flame-based” cremation—the body is incinerated. Cremation Ass’n of N. Am., Cremation Process, https://www.cremationassociation.org/page/CremationProcess (last visited Dec. 19, 2023) (“CANA Cremation Process Page”) (“Flame-based cremation uses flame and heat to reduce the human remains to bone fragments, or cremated remains.”). This traditional process uses temperatures of between 1400 to 1800 Gen. 121] 123 degrees Fahrenheit. Id. (putting the temperature at “between 1400 and 1600 degrees”); Natalie Banta Lynner, Death in a Pandemic, 70 UCLA L. Rev. 154, 185 (2023) (putting it at 1800 degrees). Unlike alkaline hydrolysis, traditional cremation produces air emissions because it converts the body’s fat and tissues into gases rather than liquids. CANA Cremation Process Page (“The process of [flame-based] cremation is essentially the conversion of a solid to a gas.”); Lynner, supra, at 185.2 As with alkaline hydrolysis, traditional cremation results in bone fragments that are pulverized and then placed in an urn. CANA Cremation Process Page.

Traditional cremation for human remains has long been in widespread commercial use and has grown in popularity in recent decades. See Revised Fiscal & Policy Note, H.B. 995, 2010 Leg., Reg. Sess. at 4. Alkaline hydrolysis, on the other hand, is still an emerging technology in the funeral industry. As far as we know, no facility of any type in Maryland currently uses it for human remains. In the United States, the process was first used by the funeral industry only in 2011—in Ohio and Florida—although it had previously been used on farms (for animal remains) and at some universities and hospitals (for human bodies donated to science). CANA Alkaline Hydrolysis Page. Today, nationwide, the process is offered by about thirty funeral services providers in fifteen states, according to the Cremation Association of North America (“Cremation Association”). Id.

The General Assembly, so far as we are aware, has never considered legislation to explicitly address the legal status of alkaline hydrolysis in Maryland. The Legislature has, in recent years, considered bills about other emerging methods for breaking down a human body. One unenacted bill would have legalized “natural organic reduction,” a method that involves the “controlled, accelerated conversion of human remains to soil.” See H.B. 1060, 2023 Leg., Reg. Sess. (Senate First Reader). Another unenacted bill would have explicitly authorized State agencies to license and

2 Because of these air emissions, traditional crematories require not only the approval of one of the funerary agencies (the Board of Morticians or the Cemetery Office), but also that of the Maryland Department of the Environment. See Kor-Ko Ltd. v. Maryland Dep’t of Envir., 451 Md. 401, 413 (2017). Although alkaline hydrolysis does not produce air emissions, the wastewater discharges it causes would similarly require the approval of federal, State, or local environmental regulators (depending on the type of discharge) if the technology were otherwise legal. See generally Maryland Dep’t of Envir., Wastewater Permits Program, https://mde.maryland.gov/programs/water/wwp/pages/ index.aspx (last visited Dec. 19, 2023). 124 [108 Op. Att’y regulate “cold cremation,” which is the “process of reducing human remains to fragments through deep freezing.” See H.B. 872, 2012 Leg., Reg. Sess. (First Reader). But the only legislative proposal we have found that mentions alkaline hydrolysis is an unenacted bill from the 2023 session that would have required a group of State agencies to study certain funeral practices, including alkaline hydrolysis and natural organic reduction. H.B. 869, 2023 Leg., Reg. Sess. (Senate Third Reader).

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Maryland Attorney General Opinion 108OAG121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-attorney-general-opinion-108oag121-mdag-2023.