Section 34-13-1 Definitions.

Section 34-13-1

Definitions.

(a) For purposes of this chapter, the following terms shall have the following meanings:

(1) ACCREDITED SCHOOL or COLLEGE OF MORTUARY SCIENCE. A school or college approved by the Alabama Board of Funeral Service and which maintains a course of instruction of not less than 48 calendar weeks or four academic quarters or college terms and which gives a course of instruction in the fundamental subjects as set forth, but not limited to, the following:

a. Mortuary management and administration.

b. Legal medicine and toxicology as it pertains to funeral directing.

c. Public health, hygiene, and sanitary science.

d. Mortuary science, to include embalming technique, in all its aspects; chemistry of embalming, color harmony; discoloration, its causes, effects, and treatment; treatment of special cases; restorative art; funeral management; and professional ethics.

e. Anatomy and physiology.

f. Chemistry, organic and inorganic.

g. Pathology.

h. Bacteriology.

i. Sanitation and hygiene.

j. Public health regulations.

k. Other courses of instruction in fundamental subjects as may be prescribed by the Alabama Board of Funeral Service.

(2) AMERICAN BOARD OF FUNERAL SERVICE EDUCATION. That funeral service educational organization which is an agency granted official recognition by the United States Secretary of Education and which is composed of members representing the American Association of College of Mortuary Science, the Conference of Funeral Service Examining Board of the United States, Inc., the National Association of Colleges of Mortuary Science, and the University Mortuary Science Education Association and which has as its object the furtherance of education in the field of funeral service and in fields necessary to, or allied with, the field of funeral service, and further to formulate standards of funeral service education and to grant accreditation to qualified schools and colleges of mortuary science and to do all things incidental to the foregoing.

(3) APPRENTICE EMBALMER or EMBALMER'S APPRENTICE. Any person engaged in the study of the art of embalming under the instructions and supervision of a licensed embalmer practicing in this state.

(4) APPRENTICE FUNERAL DIRECTOR or FUNERAL DIRECTOR'S APPRENTICE. Any person operating under or in association with a funeral director for the purpose of learning the business or profession of funeral director, to the end that he or she may become licensed under the provisions of this chapter.

(5) AUTHORIZING AGENT. A person at least 18 years of age, except in the case of a surviving spouse or parent, who is legally entitled to order the cremation or final disposition of particular human remains.

(6) BOARD. The Alabama Board of Funeral Service.

(7) CEMETERY. A place dedicated to and used or intended to be used for the permanent interment of human remains. It may be either land or earth interment; a mausoleum for vault or crypt entombment; a structure or place used or intended to be used for the interment of cremated remains; cryogenic storage; or any combination of one or more thereof.

(8) CEMETERY AUTHORITY. Any individual, person, firm, profit or nonprofit corporation, trustee, partnership, society, religious society, church, association or denomination, municipality, or other group or entity, however organized, insofar as they or any of them may now or hereafter establish, own, operate, lease, control, or manage one or more cemeteries, burial parks, mausoleums, columbariums, or any combination or variation thereof, or hold lands or structures for burial grounds or burial purposes in this state and engage in the operation of a cemetery, including any one or more of the following: The care and maintenance of a cemetery; the interment, entombment, and memorialization of the human dead in a cemetery; the sale, installation, care, maintenance, or any combination thereof, with respect of monuments, markers, foundations, memorials, burial vaults, urns, crypts, mausoleums, columbariums, flower vases, floral arrangements, and other cemetery accessories, for installation or use within a cemetery; and the supervision and conduct of funeral and burial services within the bounds of the cemetery. It is the legislative intent of this chapter that a cemetery authority, to the extent that it engages in any of the activities described in this subdivision, shall not be affected by this chapter and shall not be deemed to have entered into or engaged in the practice of funeral directing, embalming, or funeral establishment operation.

(9) CREMATION. The technical process, using heat and flame, that reduces human remains to bone fragments. The reduction takes place through heat and evaporation. Cremation shall include the processing, and may include the pulverization, of the bone fragments.

(10) CREMATIONIST. A person who performs the procedure of cremation.

(11) CREMATORY. A building or portion of a building that houses a retort and that may house a holding facility for purposes of cremation and as part of a funeral establishment.

(12) EMBALMER. Any person engaged or holding himself or herself out as engaged in the business, practice, science, or profession of embalming, whether on his or her own behalf or in the employ of a registered and licensed funeral director.

(13) EMBALMING. The practice, science, or profession, as commonly practiced, of preserving, disinfecting, and preparing by application of chemicals or other effectual methods, human dead for burial, cremation, or transportation.

(14) FUNERAL DIRECTING. The practice of directing or supervising funerals, the practice of preparing dead human bodies for burial by means other than embalming, or the preparation for the disposition of dead human bodies; the making of arrangements or providing for funeral services or the making of financial arrangements for the rendering of these services or the sale of this merchandise or supplies; the provision or maintenance of a place for the preparation for disposition of dead human bodies; or the use of the words or term "funeral director," "undertaker," "mortician," "funeral parlor," or any other word or term from which can be implied the practice of funeral directing; or the holding out to the public that one is a funeral director or engaged in a practice described in this subdivision.

(15) FUNERAL DIRECTOR. A person required to be licensed to practice the profession of funeral directing under the laws of this state, who meets the public, who plans details of funeral services with members of the family and minister or any other person responsible for such planning, or who directs, is in charge, or apparent charge of, and supervises funeral service in a funeral home, church, or other place; who enters into the making, negotiation, or completion of financial arrangements for funerals, including, but not limited to, the sale and selection of funeral supplies, or who uses in connection with the profession of funeral directing the words or terms "funeral director," "undertaker," "funeral counselor," "mortician," or any other word, term, or picture or combination thereof when considered in context in which used, from which can be implied the practicing of the profession of funeral directing or that the person using such word, term, or picture can be implied to be holding himself or herself out to the public as being engaged in the profession of funeral directing; and for all purposes under Alabama law, a funeral director is considered a professional; provided, for the purposes of this chapter, the term or terms shall not include any cemetery authority as defined in this section.

(16) FUNERAL ESTABLISHMENTS. The term "funeral home," "mortuary," or "funeral establishment" shall be construed to be a place at a specific street address or location where the profession of funeral directing, embalming, or cremation, as defined in this chapter, is practiced in the care, planning, and preparation for burial or cremation or transportation of human dead, but shall not include any cemetery or land or structure owned, operated, leased, controlled, or managed by any cemetery authority as a cemetery. All of such places shall consist of and shall maintain the following facilities:

a. A preparation room equipped with a sanitary floor and necessary drainage and ventilation and containing necessary approved tables, instruments, and supplies for the preparation and embalming of dead human bodies for burial, cremation, and transportation.

b. A display room containing a stock of adult caskets and funeral supplies.

c. At least one motor vehicle equipped for transporting human remains in a casket or urn.

d. If engaged in the practice of cremation, at least one operable retort for cremation and an adequate supply of urns for display and sale.

(17) FUNERAL SUPPLIES or FUNERAL MERCHANDISE. Caskets made of any material for use in the burial or transportation of human dead; outer receptacles, when sold by a funeral director, including burial vaults and urns, for cremated human remains; clothing used to dress human dead when sold by a funeral director; and all equipment and accouterments normally required for the preparation for burial or funeral and other disposition of human dead.

(18) MORTUARY SCIENCE. The scientific, professional, and practical aspects, with due consideration given to accepted practices, covering the care, preparation for burial, or transportation of dead human bodies, which shall include the preservation and sanitation of the bodies and restorative art and those aspects related to public health, jurisprudence, and good business administration.

(19) OPERATOR. A person, corporation, firm, legal representative, or other organization owning or operating a funeral establishment.

(20) PRACTICAL EMBALMERS. Any person who has been actively and continuously engaged or employed in the practice of embalming under the supervision of a licensed embalmer for four consecutive years immediately preceding May 1, 1975, and has been issued a license as a practical embalmer under the grandfather provisions of this chapter.

(21) PROCESSING or PULVERIZATION. The reduction of identifiable bone fragments after the completion of the cremation process to unidentifiable bone fragments or granulated particles by manual or mechanical means.

(22) RETORT. An enclosed space within which the cremation process takes place.

(23) TEMPORARY CONTAINER. A receptacle for cremated remains, usually composed of cardboard, plastic, or similar material, that can be closed in a manner that prevents the leakage or spillage of the cremated remains or the entrance of foreign material, and is a single container of sufficient size to hold the cremated remains until an urn is acquired or the cremated remains are scattered or buried.

(24) URN. A receptacle designed to encase cremated remains.

(b) Nothing in this chapter shall require a funeral director or funeral establishment to have or provide a chapel or to restrict, in any manner, the conduct of funeral services from a church or chapel.

(c) Nothing contained in the definition of funeral directing, or in any other provision of this chapter, shall be deemed or construed to be applicable to, or to regulate or restrict, in any manner, cemetery authorities in the conduct of activities of a cemetery authority as defined in this chapter; or to be applicable to, or to regulate or restrict, in any manner, the carrying on by any cemetery authority of any and all activities, functions, practices, and services which may now or hereafter (i) constitute any part of the operation or management of a cemetery or of the property of a cemetery as defined in this chapter or (ii) otherwise consist of the interment or entombment of the human dead or memorialization of the human dead in any manner within a cemetery property.

(Acts 1975, No. 214, p. 705, §2; Acts 1983, No. 83-746, p. 1235, §1; Act 2002-239, p. 498, §1.)