Plain English Summary
This bill comprehensively updates North Carolina's funeral service regulations, including adding alkaline hydrolysis as an alternative to cremation, creating new rules for transporting human remains separately from funeral contracts, reorganizing the Board of Funeral Service composition, and making various administrative changes to licensing and record-keeping requirements.
Arguments in Favor
Supporters argue the bill modernizes funeral industry practices by legalizing and regulating alkaline hydrolysis as an environmentally-friendly alternative to cremation that uses less energy and produces fewer emissions. The bill also protects consumers by creating separate standards for transportation protection agreements, allowing families to arrange remains transportation without committing to a full funeral contract. Additionally, the bill increases consumer safeguards by clarifying authorizing agent responsibilities and improving record-keeping standards.
Arguments Against
Opponents may contend the bill creates regulatory complexity by adding new license categories and overlapping Board authority over crematories and hydrolysis facilities. Some may express concerns about alkaline hydrolysis being unfamiliar to consumers, including potential confusion about environmental claims or whether it aligns with religious practices. Additionally, the bill modifies Board composition and increases enforcement costs through higher reinspection fees and attorney cost recovery, which some argue increases regulatory burden on funeral homes.
AI-generated analysis based on bill text. Always verify with official sources at ncleg.gov. This is not legal or political advice.
Sponsors

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 19

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 46

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 42

Primary Sponsor
Representative · District 65
Cosponsors (1)
Vote Breakdown (5 roll calls)
This bill was signed into law.
Final Vote
On: M11 Concur Sen. Amd. 1
Party Breakdown