Human Composting Now Legal in California

1srelluc

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Nov 21, 2021
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In a few years, people in California will have a new choice for what to do with their loved ones’ bodies after death: put them in their garden.

This weekend, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill into law that makes human composting legal in the state beginning in 2027. The bill, AB-351, makes California the fifth state to allow human composting since it was first legalized in Washington in 2019 (Oregon, Colorado, and Vermont are the other places where you can make yourself into mulch).

“AB 351 will provide an additional option for California residents that is more environmentally-friendly and gives them another choice for burial,” Assemblymember Cristina Garcia, who sponsored the bill, said in a release. “With climate change and sea-level rise as very real threats to our environment, this is an alternative method of final disposition that won’t contribute emissions into our atmosphere.”

Human beings cause more than enough trouble while we’re alive, but the practices we’ve developed to handle our bodies after death are also pretty bad for the environment. Burying a dead body takes about three gallons of embalming liquid per corpse—stuff like formaldehyde, methanol, and ethanol—and about 5.3 million gallons total gets buried with bodies each year. Meanwhile, cremation creates more than 500 pounds (227 kilograms) of carbon dioxide from the burning process of just one body, and the burning itself uses up the energy equivalent of two tanks of gasoline. In the U.S., cremation creates roughly 360,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide each year.

It’s a no-brainer, then, to think of greener alternatives. The most common process for human composting—and the one laid out in the new California law—is called natural organic reduction, which involves leaving the body in a container with some wood chips and other organic matter for about a month to let bacteria do its work. The resulting mulch (yep, it’s human body mulch) is then allowed to cure for a few more weeks before being turned over to the family. Each body can produce about a cubic yard of soil, or around one pickup truckbeds’ worth. According to Garcia’s release, this process will save about a metric ton of CO2 per body.

Seattle-based company Recompose, which is mentioned in Garcia’s press release, was the first officially licensed human composting service to open in the U.S. after Washington state legalized the practice. In the release, Recompose’s founder, Katrina Spade, who invented the natural organic reduction process and was a key part of the legalization drive in Washington, said the company hopes to expand its services to California soon.

Human Composting Now Legal in California

Fuckin' ghouls.....Nothing is sacred to the green wennies.....They would turn you into soylent green if they could get away with it.
 
iu
 
In a few years, people in California will have a new choice for what to do with their loved ones’ bodies after death: put them in their garden.

This weekend, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill into law that makes human composting legal in the state beginning in 2027. The bill, AB-351, makes California the fifth state to allow human composting since it was first legalized in Washington in 2019 (Oregon, Colorado, and Vermont are the other places where you can make yourself into mulch).

“AB 351 will provide an additional option for California residents that is more environmentally-friendly and gives them another choice for burial,” Assemblymember Cristina Garcia, who sponsored the bill, said in a release. “With climate change and sea-level rise as very real threats to our environment, this is an alternative method of final disposition that won’t contribute emissions into our atmosphere.”

Human beings cause more than enough trouble while we’re alive, but the practices we’ve developed to handle our bodies after death are also pretty bad for the environment. Burying a dead body takes about three gallons of embalming liquid per corpse—stuff like formaldehyde, methanol, and ethanol—and about 5.3 million gallons total gets buried with bodies each year. Meanwhile, cremation creates more than 500 pounds (227 kilograms) of carbon dioxide from the burning process of just one body, and the burning itself uses up the energy equivalent of two tanks of gasoline. In the U.S., cremation creates roughly 360,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide each year.

It’s a no-brainer, then, to think of greener alternatives. The most common process for human composting—and the one laid out in the new California law—is called natural organic reduction, which involves leaving the body in a container with some wood chips and other organic matter for about a month to let bacteria do its work. The resulting mulch (yep, it’s human body mulch) is then allowed to cure for a few more weeks before being turned over to the family. Each body can produce about a cubic yard of soil, or around one pickup truckbeds’ worth. According to Garcia’s release, this process will save about a metric ton of CO2 per body.

Seattle-based company Recompose, which is mentioned in Garcia’s press release, was the first officially licensed human composting service to open in the U.S. after Washington state legalized the practice. In the release, Recompose’s founder, Katrina Spade, who invented the natural organic reduction process and was a key part of the legalization drive in Washington, said the company hopes to expand its services to California soon.

Human Composting Now Legal in California

Fuckin' ghouls.....Nothing is sacred to the green wennies.....They would turn you into soylent green if they could get away with it.
Can i do that to Gavin Newsome the next time i see him without a mask?
 
I can't fathom what the problem is here. It really shouldn't be up to the government what you do with your body (or decide before you move on)

I've never wanted my loved ones to get stuck with a large bill after I'm gone. To me the problem with this bill is it doesn't go far enough.
 
In a few years, people in California will have a new choice for what to do with their loved ones’ bodies after death: put them in their garden.

This weekend, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill into law that makes human composting legal in the state beginning in 2027. The bill, AB-351, makes California the fifth state to allow human composting since it was first legalized in Washington in 2019 (Oregon, Colorado, and Vermont are the other places where you can make yourself into mulch).

“AB 351 will provide an additional option for California residents that is more environmentally-friendly and gives them another choice for burial,” Assemblymember Cristina Garcia, who sponsored the bill, said in a release. “With climate change and sea-level rise as very real threats to our environment, this is an alternative method of final disposition that won’t contribute emissions into our atmosphere.”

Human beings cause more than enough trouble while we’re alive, but the practices we’ve developed to handle our bodies after death are also pretty bad for the environment. Burying a dead body takes about three gallons of embalming liquid per corpse—stuff like formaldehyde, methanol, and ethanol—and about 5.3 million gallons total gets buried with bodies each year. Meanwhile, cremation creates more than 500 pounds (227 kilograms) of carbon dioxide from the burning process of just one body, and the burning itself uses up the energy equivalent of two tanks of gasoline. In the U.S., cremation creates roughly 360,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide each year.

It’s a no-brainer, then, to think of greener alternatives. The most common process for human composting—and the one laid out in the new California law—is called natural organic reduction, which involves leaving the body in a container with some wood chips and other organic matter for about a month to let bacteria do its work. The resulting mulch (yep, it’s human body mulch) is then allowed to cure for a few more weeks before being turned over to the family. Each body can produce about a cubic yard of soil, or around one pickup truckbeds’ worth. According to Garcia’s release, this process will save about a metric ton of CO2 per body.

Seattle-based company Recompose, which is mentioned in Garcia’s press release, was the first officially licensed human composting service to open in the U.S. after Washington state legalized the practice. In the release, Recompose’s founder, Katrina Spade, who invented the natural organic reduction process and was a key part of the legalization drive in Washington, said the company hopes to expand its services to California soon.

Human Composting Now Legal in California

Fuckin' ghouls.....Nothing is sacred to the green wennies.....They would turn you into soylent green if they could get away with it.
if they are the 5th state to do this why are you singling out them?.....
 
I dislike almost everything about California politically and socially, but this doesn't bother me really. How is fertilizing flowers with your remains worse than having your blood drained and replaced with chemicals, and dolled up to look like a sick horror movie prop??? Our bodies are meat after we die, plain and simple. It is disrespecting the planet and ourselves to refuse to go back to the dust from which we came naturally.
 
I remember when my grandfather bought a drawer in a public mausoleum. He was really impressed with how clean the floor was and how they just hygenically shoved your corpus into drawer.

He would be mortified by this.
 
In a few years, people in California will have a new choice for what to do with their loved ones’ bodies after death: put them in their garden.

This weekend, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a bill into law that makes human composting legal in the state beginning in 2027. The bill, AB-351, makes California the fifth state to allow human composting since it was first legalized in Washington in 2019 (Oregon, Colorado, and Vermont are the other places where you can make yourself into mulch).

“AB 351 will provide an additional option for California residents that is more environmentally-friendly and gives them another choice for burial,” Assemblymember Cristina Garcia, who sponsored the bill, said in a release. “With climate change and sea-level rise as very real threats to our environment, this is an alternative method of final disposition that won’t contribute emissions into our atmosphere.”

Human beings cause more than enough trouble while we’re alive, but the practices we’ve developed to handle our bodies after death are also pretty bad for the environment. Burying a dead body takes about three gallons of embalming liquid per corpse—stuff like formaldehyde, methanol, and ethanol—and about 5.3 million gallons total gets buried with bodies each year. Meanwhile, cremation creates more than 500 pounds (227 kilograms) of carbon dioxide from the burning process of just one body, and the burning itself uses up the energy equivalent of two tanks of gasoline. In the U.S., cremation creates roughly 360,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide each year.

It’s a no-brainer, then, to think of greener alternatives. The most common process for human composting—and the one laid out in the new California law—is called natural organic reduction, which involves leaving the body in a container with some wood chips and other organic matter for about a month to let bacteria do its work. The resulting mulch (yep, it’s human body mulch) is then allowed to cure for a few more weeks before being turned over to the family. Each body can produce about a cubic yard of soil, or around one pickup truckbeds’ worth. According to Garcia’s release, this process will save about a metric ton of CO2 per body.

Seattle-based company Recompose, which is mentioned in Garcia’s press release, was the first officially licensed human composting service to open in the U.S. after Washington state legalized the practice. In the release, Recompose’s founder, Katrina Spade, who invented the natural organic reduction process and was a key part of the legalization drive in Washington, said the company hopes to expand its services to California soon.

Human Composting Now Legal in California

Fuckin' ghouls.....Nothing is sacred to the green wennies.....They would turn you into soylent green if they could get away with it.
I have placed small amounts of cremated remains in the ground to nourish special plants, but the composting thing? Just gross.
 
This thread is just awful.

I don't think this bill is a problem, as long as it is a choice. The problem, will become when it is, normalized, and no longer a choice, or when the government decides it wants to incentivize and promote by social control, the taxing of other means of body disposal, or give this means, a tax credit.

If this method is given government economic preference over other methods of funerary, it will amount to religious and spiritual discrimination.

There are a lot of folks in this thread, that are clearly humanists and atheists, who have very little empathy and are tone deaf to this issue. Indeed, yes, they probably do need to fuck off.
 

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