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Want a green burial in Florida? Here鈥檚 what you need to know.

Mourners lay flowers on a body wrapped in a shroud before it is lowered into a grave at Heartwood Preserve Conservation Cemetery near Tampa, Florida.
Courtesy of Heartwood Preserve
/
The Miami Herald
Mourners lay flowers on a body wrapped in a shroud before it is lowered into a grave at Heartwood Preserve Conservation Cemetery near Tampa, Florida.

A growing number of people in Florida and across the country are considering 鈥済reen鈥 or 鈥渘atural鈥 burials as an alternative to traditional burials or cremation.

Green burials do away with elaborate caskets, embalming fluids, concrete vaults and tombstones. Instead, bodies are buried in simple caskets or shrouds with discrete markers 鈥 often a small metal stake 鈥 and allowed to biodegrade. The result is fewer carbon emissions than cremations and less impact on the climate.

If you鈥檙e thinking about green burial, it鈥檚 a good idea to start planning while you鈥檙e able to record your wishes to your family. There also are a limited number of cemeteries in Florida that offer green burials and not all funeral homes will know how to support one.

Make a plan and tell someone about it

The most important thing you can do is write down what you want done with your body, store that document somewhere safe and make sure your loved ones know where it is and how to access it. You can also ask a lawyer to add the wishes to a will.

To make it easier on family, you might specify which funeral home to go to, which cemetery you prefer, what type of casket or shroud you want to be buried in and who鈥檚 in charge of making that happen.

Know your cemetery options

For now, there are that offer green burials in Florida.

Four are conventional cemeteries where you鈥檒l find the mowed lawns and rows of tombstones you鈥檇 expect in a graveyard. Each of them also offers families the choice of a green burial, sometimes in a designated section of the cemetery. These are called 鈥渉ybrid鈥 cemeteries, because they offer a mix of both traditional and green burials.

Those who want a green burial at a hybrid cemetery in Florida can try the Eternal Rest Memorial Park in Dunedin, the Brooksville Cemetery Green Meadows in Brooksville, the Riverview Memorial Gardens in Cocoa or the South Florida Jewish Cemetery in Lake Worth. (Note that the South Florida Jewish Cemetery only offers Jewish burials.)

READ MORE: Meet the farmers who founded Florida鈥檚 first green burial cemetery

The remaining three green burial sites in Florida are natural burial grounds or conservation cemeteries. That means their goal is to preserve natural ecosystems. Native plants and animals roam freely and there isn鈥檛 a lawnmower in sight. Part of the point of the burial is to make sure the land never gets developed and to help pay for upkeep like controlled burns.

These three sites are Prairie Creek Conservation Cemetery near Gainesville, Heartwood Preserve Conservation Cemetery near Tampa and Glendale Memorial Nature Preserve near DeFuniak Springs. Note that Heartwood Preserve is the only one of the three that can sell plots 鈥減re-need,鈥 which is to say, before you die.

Don't get hung up on certification status

The Green Burial Council (GBC) is a national organization that sets standards for funeral homes and cemeteries that offer green burials and issues certifications for providers that can prove their operations are up to snuff. If a funeral home or cemetery is certified by the GBC, you can be confident that it will take good care of your body and follow high standards for protecting the environment.

But industry experts say other well-run places also can handle green burials. The key is to inquire upfront.

鈥淚鈥檓 one of the people who helped put those standards together, so I can tell you: Certification is not a requirement,鈥 said Lee Webster, a former board member for the Green Burial Council and one of the founding members of the Conservation Burial Alliance. 鈥淚 know loads and loads of cemeteries around the country and in Florida that follow those standards and don鈥檛 see the need to have a piece of paper on the wall.鈥

If you鈥檙e considering a green burial or conservation burial at an uncertified cemetery, the key question to ask is whether there is a conservation easement or deed restriction on the area where you鈥檒l be buried, according to Green Burial Council president Ed Bixby. That legally prevents the cemetery owner 鈥 or anyone who buys the land in the future 鈥 from using it for some other purpose.

鈥淚f you create this deed restriction and you place it against your property, then the consumer can rest assured that you鈥檒l never change it,鈥 said Bixby.

In Florida, only three cemeteries 鈥 Prairie Creek, Brooksville Cemetery and the South Florida Jewish Cemetery 鈥 are GBC certified. And only five Florida funeral homes are certified by the GBC.

Quinn Haisley is a funeral director at Haisley Funeral Home in Fort Pierce, which is one of the five certified funeral homes in Florida. She says certification is 鈥渂eneficial, but not necessary.鈥

鈥淎ny funeral home can do a little research of their own and be able to reach out to one of the green burial cemeteries for help in final disposition,鈥 she said.

But, she added, green burial is still relatively new and not all funeral directors know how to handle it. You might have to call around to a few funeral homes in your area to find one that can help you.

This climate report is funded by , the Knight Foundation and the in partnership with Journalism Funding Partners. The Miami Herald retains editorial control of all content.

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