Culture You Can Now Compost Dead People in New York - Gov. Kathy Hochul signed a bill that would legalize composting human bodies after death.

There’s a new option for people in New York trying to figure out what to do with their bodies after they die. Over the weekend, Governor Kathy Hochul signed Assembly Bill A382 into law, which legalizes the process of natural organic reduction—more popularly known as human composting—in New York State.

There are several reasons to choose being composted over alternative end-of-life methods. Burial uses a hefty amount of nasty stuff that’s harmful to the environment. One corpse needs about three gallons of chemicals, including formaldehyde, methanol, and ethanol, which can leach into soil and groundwater; around 5.3 million gallons get buried with dead bodies each year. Meanwhile, cremating bodies takes energy and in the U.S. generates about 360,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide each year from the burning process.

Natural organic reduction works by curing a human corpse with wood chips in a special container for several weeks, where it breaks down into mulch. Each body produces a cubic yard of soil—about what can fit in a pickup truck—that the family of the deceased can then use in gardens or scatter outdoors. Industry estimates show that the process could save around one metric ton of CO2 per body.

The movement around human composting in the U.S. has picked up steam in recent years. In 2019, Washington became the first state to legalize the process; it was quickly followed by Colorado and Oregon in 2021. New York is the third state, following California and Vermont, to legalize human composting in 2022; Delaware, Hawaii, and Maine have all proposed similar legislation. Bills in New York to legalize the process were proposed in 2020 and 2021 but never got traction to come to a vote; this past year, however, the bill sailed nearly unanimously through the House and Senate.

Human composting in the U.S. has been almost entirely spearheaded by a Seattle-based organization called Recompose, which was the first organization to license human composting in the U.S. and whose founder, Katrina Spade, patented the natural organic reduction process.

“Cremation uses fossil fuels and burial uses a lot of land and has a carbon footprint,” Spade told the AP. “For a lot of folks being turned into soil that can be turned to grow into a garden or tree is pretty impactful.”

Not everyone is on board with this new method. The New York State Catholic Conference, a group that represents Catholic bishops, urged Catholics in November to contact Hochul to oppose the bill.

“Composting is something we as a society associate with a sustainable method of eliminating organic trash that otherwise ends up in landfills,” Dennis Poust, the group’s executive director, said in a statement on the bill’s passage. “But human bodies are not household waste, and the bishops do not believe that the process meets the standard of reverent treatment of our earthly remains.”

 
This is how they'll lower their murder statistics. Just stop counting, and toss the victims onto the corpse pile.
This is how we'll increase our article count. Just not merge them into this thread and keeping an eye out for all the follow-up found body stories.
 
This is how they'll lower their murder statistics. Just stop counting, and toss the victims onto the corpse pile.
There is only one human composting company called Recompose Life in Seattle. They do not put the corpses in a big pile, they give them each their own vessel to decompose in and then return the soil remains to the family to use in a memorial garden or scatter like ashes.
There are no facilities in NY to even do this yet, but I think it's a fine burial option. It's really not too different from natural burial and some people are really into the "going back to the earth" thing. You'd think just hippies but outdoorsy, conservative-leaning men too. Farmers, hunters, loggers etc.
It's kind of interesting human composting is taking off and getting quickly legalized in many states but poor aquamation has been around for decades and still not legal or available in a lot of places. I think as many options as possible would be a good thing bc there are so many kinds of people. We should have aquamation, embalmed burial, cremation, natural burial, conservation burial grounds, Promession, human composting. All of it.
"This will never be taken advantage of and be used for nefarious reasons, we swear!"
That's a valid point, it's an issue with cremation too. I've heard of true crime cases where they seem almost too eager to cremate as quickly as possible and then find out that person killed them and is trying to cover up the evidence. Cremation destroys all DNA except sometimes in bone fragments, but it's not easy to extract.
 
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