May 04, 2018, 03:28 PM
ZSMICHAELIllinois coroner to poor: Pay $1000 or county keeps remains
A coroner in western Illinois is facing sharp criticism for how he handles poor people who can’t afford to bury their loved ones: He has them sign over their rights to the deceased, leaving them without the death certificate, then cremates the body and keeps the ashes until the family pays $1,000.
If they can’t come up with the money, the ashes are eventually buried, along with others, in an unmarked grave. If the family needs the death certificate to access bank accounts or life insurance, the coroner first arranges for the county to recoup its costs from any proceeds.
Adams County Coroner James Keller says the policy started after the state, which for years has faced billion-dollar deficits and unpaid bills, announced it was too broke to pay for indigent funerals and burials — shifting the cost to funeral homes and county coroners. Of the $1,000 people pay, he says $800 goes to the funeral homes and $200 to the crematory.
The county’s poverty rate of 13 percent is on par with the overall rate in Illinois. Keller says his approach protects taxpayers in the small county along the Mississippi River, ensures local funeral homes get money for their services and gives poor families an alternative to paying for a full burial. He’s continued the policy even though the state has resumed paying for the funerals.
“We do our very best and our due diligence to taxpayers, and we try to be supportive of families, with the hand that we’re dealt with the state,” Keller said.
Some residents are trying to change the policy, saying it amounts to the coroner’s office holding ashes hostage and creates a financial crisis for grieving relatives already struggling to pay for basic necessities.
“I felt like it was a kidnapping. He was being held against his will,” said Tom McElroy, whose brother, Mark, died last year with nothing more than the $200 in his wallet.
After Chris Weible died last month, his family held a memorial service at a Quincy church with just a photograph and an empty container. Weible and his ex-wife, Wendy Smith, who had three children together, were both on disability.
“I just think they pick on the people that are poor,” Smith said.
How to pay for indigent burials is a question that has stymied other counties and states. More than a dozen states provide money to cover the costs, though several — from Indiana to West Virginia — say their funds haven’t been enough to meet demands.
Illinois provides up to $1,655 — $1,103 for funerals and $552 for cremation and burial. But the money was cut off in 2010 and again in 2015 as the state headed into a more than two-year budget impasse. In some cases, counties ended up picking up the costs.
Rod Cookson, co-owner of Zehender Robinson Stormer Cookson Funeral Home in Quincy, said at one point the state owed his business about $20,000. Cookson said he didn’t know the Legislature restored the funding.
“They’re bankrupt,” he said of the state.
He’s not the only funeral home director who’s either unaware that funding is available again or has given up on the state. Though lawmakers appropriated $9.3 million this year — the same amount as the 2015 budget year — the number of claims has plummeted, from 5,652 in the 2015 budget year to 1,084 so far this fiscal year, which ends June 30.
Cookson likes Keller’s program and said and it’s not right that some are making him out to be “next to the devil.” While some places such as Chicago’s Cook County pay for indigent burials, in other counties poor residents must call around to funeral homes until they find one that will help.
“These people that don’t have any money are very, very lucky to live in Adams County,” Cookson said.
Keller also works as a funeral director, but he insists his decision to create the policy was unrelated to his other job.
He says he had 90 inquiries about indigent burials last year. He says he asks families multiple times if they’re sure they want to sign over their loved one’s body, and gives them time to change their minds. He says he doesn’t give them the death certificate or ashes to protect against “abuse,” such as a case in which he later learned a family that didn’t want to pay for burial had received life insurance.
Smith has a different version of events. She says she was unclear about what the form she was signing would do, and that she asked Keller if he could work with her to make payments toward the $1,000 and he refused. She also says Keller told her that if she didn’t pay, he’d bury the ashes in a cemetery and not reveal the location. He denies that, but several friends and family say they heard Keller make that statement or that he separately told them the same thing.
Smith eventually raised the $1,000 through donations. McElroy’s family did the same, but it took months.
“He could’ve died in prison and been better off,” Tom McElroy said. “He deserved better.”
http://wgntv.com/2018/05/04/il...ounty-keeps-remains/May 04, 2018, 03:54 PM
jimb888Kid I grew up with just passed away in another state. They said he died indigent and that if no one ponied up $1000 they'd eventually cremate him and if no one showed up with the cash eventually they'd toss him in the local body of water.
My first thought was what happened to the 2 guns he always had on him, those would pay for this. My next thought (as obviously they probably couldn't just sell his property without due process) was "Meh, float away buddy, soon enough I'll be joining you and it seemed like as good of a way to go as any." Whether he deserved better or not doesn't matter, gone is gone, plenty of folks see much much worse.
May 04, 2018, 03:54 PM
jhe888"[H]e was being held against his will"
Some people don't think about what they are saying, do they?
May 04, 2018, 03:59 PM
HRKThe coroner should contact those bitching and ask them if they'd like to donate money to help cover the expenses of burial for these folks.
Complaints will drop to nil....
May 04, 2018, 05:22 PM
MikeinNCGive them the body back, let them find a suitable place to plant their deceased...
But the death certificate should be available thru the county clerk of court or register of deeds...not the coroner.
May 04, 2018, 08:14 PM
mikeyspizzaI agree with MikeinNC.
Per IL law the death certificate has to be filed within 7 days.
The story is an Associated Press story, and all the “local” stories are the same AP story. Maybe this is another case of not getting the facts right.
Usually, as part of cremation or funeral cost, you request and pay for X copies of the death certificate.
But in these cases the families are not paying, so . . . maybe they mean he doesn’t “give” them one for free.
Instead, they have to go through the hassle of going through the IL Dept of Public Health - at $19 for first copy and $4 for each additional copy, plus however long it takes.
May 04, 2018, 09:33 PM
jbcummingsSF lawyers, a question about this. Isn’t a death certificate a document that ends up posted with the county? I’ve had to get death certificates for my father because the originals were lost and I just paid $30 for the first one and something like $5 for each additional after filling out a form. Is it legal, in general, for a coroner to “withhold” these documents?
May 04, 2018, 11:31 PM
EdmondI haven't priced out a funeral but I assume that it probably costs more than the $1,000 for cremation...
May 05, 2018, 09:19 AM
YooperSigsOk.... So if this is a problem, the solution seems simple: Install a crematorium in the Coroners Office. It might cost up front but at 1K a crack, it would pay for itself soon enough. That cuts out the funeral home altogether.
May 05, 2018, 10:22 AM
BirdvolAn friend is a funeral director.
Says a cremation should range in cost from $850 to $1200.
So a $1000.00 is a reasonable cost for the cremains.
May 05, 2018, 10:57 AM
Sailor1911Well, they could always ship him to Cook County. A twofer, he gets buried on the County's dime AND he can still vote!

May 05, 2018, 11:13 AM
ensigmaticquote:
Originally posted by ZSMICHAEL:
After Chris Weible died last month, his family held a memorial service at a Quincy church with just a photograph and an empty container. Weible and his ex-wife, Wendy Smith, who had three children together, were both on disability.
“I just think they pick on the people that are poor,” Smith said.
Another scathing indictment of the public "education" system and the joke that passes for "news" in this country.
News flash, idiot: Things cost money.
Somebody has to pay for it. The fact that you're poor and others won't pay your way isn't "picking on you." It's others simply not paying your way.
There have been many, many things I'd have liked to have had over the years, but could not afford. That somebody else did not provide those things to me did not in my mind amount to my having been "picked on" because they did not.