Assembly Bill 351, written by Assembly member Cristina Garcia (D鈥擝ell Gardens), allows natural organic reduction facilities to be established in California. These facilities process human remains into soil 鈥 informally known as 鈥渉uman composting.鈥
Seattle-based company Recompose offers natural organic reduction services in the Pacific Northwest. Morgan Yarborough, a funeral director with the company, that the process offers both a meaningful and environmentally-friendly way to honor the deceased.
"When someone dies, they are placed inside one of our vessels, so it's a chamber that encloses the person,鈥 Yarborough said. 鈥淎nd they're placed in this vessel with a mixture of wood chips, alfalfa and straw. And so they are cocooned in that, if you will, and then that transformation takes place inside of that vessel in about 30 days."
The vessels are made of steel and encompassed by a hexagonal frame, . They are stacked together in a shape that 鈥渓ooks like honeycomb,鈥 Yarborough said.
Once the process is complete, the compost is removed from the vessel and allowed to cure for several weeks, she said. Family members can then use the human compost for gardening, or they can donate it to be spread in conservation areas.
The cremation process, which has risen in demand in recent years according to a from the National Funeral Directors Association, requires the use of fossil fuels to process human remains. The incineration process can release particulate matter like sulfur dioxide, mercury and other heavy metals into the atmosphere.
Traditional burials can pose environmental issues, too 鈥 the embalming process uses chemicals like arsenic and aluminum which can leach into the soil after remains have been buried, according to . Cemetery lawn upkeep is , a resource that鈥檚 increasingly scarce as extreme drought continues to plague California.
鈥淲ildfires, extreme drought, record heat waves remind us that climate change is real and we must do everything we can to reduce methane and CO2 emissions,鈥 Garcia, the bill鈥檚 author, said . 鈥淭his is an alternative method of final disposition that won鈥檛 contribute emissions into our atmosphere and will actually capture CO2 in our soil and trees.鈥
The adoption of a natural organic reduction process has not gone without criticism 鈥 representatives of the Catholic Church in California have said the process 鈥渞educes the human body to simply a disposable commodity.鈥
Kathleen Domingo, the Executive Director of the California Catholic Conference, said the process also can create a distance between family and the deceased, :
"[Natural organic reduction] uses essentially the same process as a home gardening composting system," she said. "Using these same methods for the 'transformation' of human remains can create an unfortunate spiritual, emotional and psychological distancing from the deceased."
Yarborough said in her experience, however, it鈥檚 been the opposite.
鈥淚've never seen people connect to a process of death care like I have with natural organic reduction, especially when they see that soil after a couple of months, they're able to come up to it, to touch it and to know that that was their person,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t's a beautiful and truly spiritual moment.鈥
Four states currently allow natural organic reduction: Washington, Colorado, Oregon and Vermont. Yarborough said that the organization receives remains from all over the nation, and calls from people worldwide who 鈥渇ind what we're doing to be very meaningful. They want to know more and they want to support us.鈥
The new law takes effect in 2027.
Steve Milne contributed to this report.
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