By proceeding, I agree that I understand the following disclosures:
I. How We Work in Washington. Based on your preferences, we provide you with information about one or more of our contracted senior living providers ("Participating Communities") and provide your Senior Living Care Information to Participating Communities. The Participating Communities may contact you directly regarding their services. APFM does not endorse or recommend any provider. It is your sole responsibility to select the appropriate care for yourself or your loved one. We work with both you and the Participating Communities in your search. We do not permit our Advisors to have an ownership interest in Participating Communities.
II. How We Are Paid. We do not charge you any fee – we are paid by the Participating Communities. Some Participating Communities pay us a percentage of the first month's standard rate for the rent and care services you select. We invoice these fees after the senior moves in.
III. When We Tour. APFM tours certain Participating Communities in Washington (typically more in metropolitan areas than in rural areas.) During the 12 month period prior to December 31, 2017, we toured 86.2% of Participating Communities with capacity for 20 or more residents.
IV. No Obligation or Commitment. You have no obligation to use or to continue to use our services. Because you pay no fee to us, you will never need to ask for a refund.
V. Complaints. Please contact our Family Feedback Line at (866) 584-7340 or
[email protected] to report any complaint. Consumers have many avenues to address a dispute with any referral service company, including the right to file a complaint with the Attorney General's office at: Consumer Protection Division, 800 5th Avenue, Ste. 2000, Seattle, 98104 or 800-551-4636.
VI. No Waiver of Your Rights. APFM does not (and may not) require or even ask consumers seeking senior housing or care services in Washington State to sign waivers of liability for losses of personal property or injury or to sign waivers of any rights established under law.I agree that: A.I authorize A Place For Mom ("APFM") to collect certain personal and contact detail information, as well as relevant health care information about me or from me about the senior family member or relative I am assisting ("Senior Living Care Information"). B.APFM may provide information to me electronically. My electronic signature on agreements and documents has the same effect as if I signed them in ink. C.APFM may send all communications to me electronically via e-mail or by access to an APFM web site. D.If I want a paper copy, I can print a copy of the Disclosures or download the Disclosures for my records. E.This E-Sign Acknowledgement and Authorization applies to these Disclosures and all future Disclosures related to APFM's services, unless I revoke my authorization. You may revoke this authorization in writing at any time (except where we have already disclosed information before receiving your revocation.) This authorization will expire after one year. F.You consent to APFM's reaching out to you using a phone system than can auto-dial numbers (we miss rotary phones, too!), but this consent is not required to use our service.
*If I am consenting on behalf of someone else, I have the proper authorization to do so. By clicking Get My Results, you agree to our
Privacy Policy. You also consent to receive calls and texts, which may be autodialed, from us and our customer communities. Your consent is not a condition to using our service. Please visit our
Terms of Use. for information about our privacy practices.
80% of funeral homes are owned by a family (no government FH's in the USA). 20% are owned by publicly traded company FH's (They may be more likely to afford paying our of pocket for YOUR fees).
Best OPTION: get real-what can you afford-- in today's economy probably Cremation also become a common practice - BUT if you WANT full burial - I DO - then talk to an insurance agent, talk to a funeral director - talk to your cemetery - Plan ahead- purchase an Irrevocable Burial Contract - so it is not taken during medicaid spend down as many are placing elderly patients in a nursing home - and then they run out of money - BUT your Irrevocable Burial Funds are SAFE!!!
in MA
They are supposed to be knowledgable about what a poor person can do for burial.
But, Beware: many will do anything to extract money out of family and friends, trying to get them to sign papers, contracts, agreements, choose coffins, etc., all while speaking in very sympathetic emotional manipulative voices.
Unless you feel you can deal with the cost of even a "cheap" funeral, don't sign anything a funeral director puts under your nose, unless you are Very clear what it is, and can afford the expense! No one is required to pay for a funeral for someone else, not even a family member.
It's kinda like playing a game of "hot potato" sometimes--whoever is holding the body, has to deal with it. If the person dies in hospital, the facility will try to pressure family to take the financial burden of disposal.
.....like when an elder is in a facility, and the facility wants them out of there, and no other facility has a bed.....the facility will try to coerce family every way they can pressure them, to take the elder home....family member then becomes the "last one holding the potato", and is responsible for whatever the elder does there.
One good place to start seeking low-cost or free arrangements:
http://www.us-funerals.com/funeral-articles/low-cost-and-free-cremations.html
Read the main page,
then click on the State that is right for your situation.
Mom's last spouse died with literally nothing his pajamas.
We found /American Funeral and Cremation/ then, and it cost about $700.
She had to come with me to sign papers authorizing them to cremate, to be on file with a local mortuary, and which attested to the fact that he was expected to die, was in hospice at home.
Their office was in a rent-a-space. I was a bit concerned that it might be a scam, but it was not. Mom signed the papers, I prepaid the fee.
When he died, I called the mortuary.
They sent someone to pick up his body, did the cremation, then returned the ashes in a plain box, to Mom. [We had to go fetch them from the mortuary--it was a heavily tape-reinforced cardboard box, about 12"x5"x10", and heavy!].
Warning: Funeral homes will often force people to buy a cardboard "coffin" to cremate the body in. It's ridiculous.
ASK them if they require that. They shouldn't, but some will force that issue by hook or crook--it's good to ask this in advance, to give you time to look around elsewhere, or pressure them right back--time to call the State regulators to learn if it really is a State Law or not.
Pretty sure his box of ashes, were mostly that cardboard coffin.
After that, we started keeping a lookout for other ways.
We also learned that American Funeral and Cremation, seemed to go out of business, then reappeared a few years later.
We searched online for Body Donation options, too.
Bodies can be donated for scientific /medical research.
Those cremate remains, for free.
They will usually let family choose to let them dispose of remains, or, will cremate them and return the ashes to family.
We found one in Portland, Oregon, which is supposed to handle the Western States, as long as the body is Under 250 pounds. They interface with local mortuaries.
They provide tissues from cadavers, for scientific research and medical.
There are others.
Documents need to be Signed and Notarized in advance of need, and filed with the company.
Many people immediately think of donating to colleges and universities...but we learned, often those have a stockpile of cadavers, so may often refuse more donations at inconvenient times for families.
I wouldn't trust that any City would have much funding to pay for poverty funerals. Most cities and States are kinda broke these days...they can't even adequately help the living.
Some very large and prosperous churches might--but those are on the decline.
Whatever you prepay for, if that is your choice, advice is:
do the paperwork as close to the expected time of death as you can, to avoid the companies disappearing with the little bit you paid them. There is no need to prepay for services years in advance--if you do, you could get ripped off in a number of ways.
It USED to be, one could prepay for a funeral, and it was honored all over the country--the body was just shipped back to the place the arrangements were made. Extra fees got paid for "Funeral Insurance".
THAT does not exist like it did, anymore.
We asked.
There are Insurance Policies which pay some or all of funeral expenses, but they are Not usually tied to mortuaries.
Those Policies are independent [fly-by-night] insurers which usually either go out of business, or, they get bought up by other insurers....
We went through that mess, trying to track down a couple old insurance policies Mom's spouse had bought....
those companies had been bought up several times, changing names each time, finally losing the money they'd paid into them...to a State Fund?
What a RACKET.
But even then, there is supposed to be a State Fund which holds all the money paid into those lost policy companies....it just practically takes an act of congress to extract the money out of that. It's complicated, and long process, from what I learned so far.
If you have money each month to spend on an Insurance Policy to pay for the funeral, you could put it into a savings account or Savings Bonds or something, towards the same thing--and keep control of the money yourself!
Too many who are poor, sucker into buying those policies, knowing they won't be able to pay them in full, that death will happen sooner
...and they believe the money will then be there fore their families
...but it's not assured.
Good luck!
I believe but don't know for sure that you can build your own casket. you can also rent a fancy casket for the viewing and use something simpler for the buriel. my mother was cremated in the UK over 30 years ago and the crematorium scattered the ashes on their flower beds and placed a small plaque on the wall. We could of course have had the ashes returned. When my in laws died many years later FIL was cremated and his ashes kept by the funeral home till MIL was buried several years later and his ashes were buried with her. I did not handle the finances for any of that but I know my hubby has the key to his mother's casket, not I might add that he plans to use it.
Today, I found these by searching online; the CHEAPEST cremation or burials for Western WA State:
================
Peoples Memorial Association
FUNERAL AND CREMATION CARE:
Offices: Administration (Payment Address)
Funeral & Cremation Care Locations
Bellevue Branch, 1400 112th Ave SE, Bellevue, WA 98004
Kennewick Branch, 1030 N. Center Parkway, Kennewick, WA 99336
Vancouver Branch, 4400 NE 77th Ave Ste. 275, Vancouver, WA 98662
Simple Cremation of Washington & Oregon Locations:
Simple Cremation of Bellingham, 1313 E. Maple St., Bellingham, WA 98225
Simple Cremation of Olympia, 975 Carpenter Rd NE, Lacey, WA 98516
Simple Cremation of Portland, 5320 SW Macadam Ave., Portland, OR 97239
Simple Cremation of Seattle, 1700 7th Ave Ste. 2100, Seattle, WA 98101
Simple Cremation of Spokane, 1312 N. Monroe St., Spokane, WA 99201
Simple Cremation of Tacoma, 2101 Pacific Ave #600, Tacoma, WA 98402
$495.00 Simple Cremation Plan™
or $995.00 Graveside Service
or $1,495.00 Funeral Service
===============
AMERICAN CREMATION AND CASKET ALLIANCE
5 Funeral Homes Serving the Seattle & Tacoma, Washington
Low Cost Cremation Service Starts at $584
Affordable Funeral Home Services Starts at $1,299
====================
http://www.americanmemorial.org/fh/home/home.cfm?fh_id=11959
AMERICAN MEMORIAL FUNERAL DIRECTORS
MAILING ADDRESS: P.O. Box 1745, Bellevue, WA 98009
Locations:
Everett: 3125 Colby Avenue, 98201
Bellevue: 800 Bellevue Way, Suite 400, 98004
Renton: 100 Blaine Avenue NE, 98056
Tacoma: 7401 S. Pine Street, 98409
Olympia: 925 Capital Way S., 98501
The following Package Prices feature our most requested services:
DIRECT CREMATION $597.
The removal of the deceased from a care facility during normal business hours within the metropolitan areas of King, Pierce, Thurston and Snohomish counties.
The minimum services of our funeral director and staff, the basic use of our facilities and environmentally controlled sheltering of remains and the actual cremation process with minimal containers.
CREMATION WITH PRIVATE VIEWING $897.
The Direct Cremation Package as above and includes viewing by up to 5 immediate family members.
DIRECT BURIAL AT GRAVESIDE WITH CASKET $1395.
Includes removal of deceased, transferring of casketed remains by van to local cemetery for graveside services.
Services of our funeral director and staff to arrange and direct graveside service and coordinate service with cemetery or crematory.
Basic use of our facilities, sheltering of remains and cloth covered casket is included.
TRADITIONAL FUNERAL SERVICE $1595.
Includes removal of the deceased, standard embalming at family's request, dressing and casketing.
Transferring of casketed remains to local cemetery or crematory for disposition. Services of our funeral director and staff to arrange graveside service and coordinate service with the cemetery.
Basic use of our facilities and sheltering of remains.
Social Security DOES have that approx. $200 death payment.
BUT, that's nowhere near the cost of even a cheap cremation, much less a burial.
When Mom's spouse was in hospice, I called around after seeing an
Ad for "American Burial and Cremation".
Learned it was THE cheapest show in the region--at that time.
Took Mom to sign papers for them to do body pick-up when he died....that company contracted with various mortuaries in the region to do that and the cremation.
It cost me about $700 out-of-pocket in 2005, pre-paid.
Everything else found at that time, cost far more.
She specified just the basic cardboard box for cremation [not a ca$ket], and no urn--just return the ashes to her in the reinforced basis box.
Once that was done, that company seemed to disappear, then reappeared--
I never quite knew when it was gonna be around or not.
PAUPER's Burial
There used to be "pauper's burials".
There still might be--but truly only for those who die with ZERO assets.
IF you have insurance policy, or ANY assets to sell to pay for funerary costs--you'll have to do that---or go into debt to pay for costs.
CHEAP programs:
Various States have various cheap programs. These come and go over time--kinda fly-by-night, but usually, there is one or more of them when needed.
Check your area for availability of these. Online makes it pretty easy.
EMBALMING:
NOT required by law anymore, BUT, may need to bury or process body within 24 or a certain time limit.
Modern mortuaries have freezers to store bodies without embalming--but too often, mortuaries coerce or out-right lie to get people to pay for embalming.... Unless they lack a freezer, or your State has some archaic laws still invoked, embalming is no longer required---especially if there's to be a cremation!
BUT...Embalming usually is required IF a whole body or parts are to be transported.
CASKET:
NOT required, but a cardboard container may be required by mortuary for cremation. "Green Burials" generally don't use caskets, instead opting for compostable baskets, sheets, etc. Many cemeteries still have rules mandating certain types of caskets, and/or headstones--check limitations---get it in writing!
One gal near here bought a very nice standing headstone for her Mom, but the cemetery changed the rules for headstones in the middle of her getting it made---and blocked it being installed on her Mom's grave, even though it was permitted when she started out-----so it still sits in her front yard, where all traffic can see it.
CREMATION is always cheaper than burial, unless there is a pauper's burial ground in your area, and you qualify for that.
BURIAL PLOTS and CREMATION CONTRACTS....
....are ONLY good in the home area where the contract was made, unless you pay huge amounts to transport the body back to that area [like if someone dies while traveling away from home-turf].
FUNERAL INSURANCE POLICIES:
These are usually not larger than about $10,000.
You pay monthly towards an insurance policy that's usually advertised as:
"You can use this to pay bills, gift your heirs, or pay for funeral expenses".
You'd probably be better off putting the same amount of money in a savings account [IF you start early enough].
Those companies are BETTING that the policies get lost; or that the elderly they prey on forget to pay after awhile [lapsing the policy], or otherwise don't collect on it, AFTER they got the money paid for it.
HEADS-UP:
After MUCH digging, trying to find information on an old policy my folks paid into for some time, but the paper was old, the company no longer exists....
I was told "ALL Insurance companies must put some money into a common escrow account of sorts, to cover policies that get lost, since companies come and go so fast.
They might argue with you, but they MUST pay out on policies if you have the document, even if the company on the old document no longer exists" They might even argue against it when they have a copy of the policy Faxed to them---if they argue, take it to the State Insurance Commissioner to get help handling that.
FUNERAL - PLAN - INSURANCE.
This is a policy that guarantees the pre-paid funeral plans will either :
1] ship the body back home [a reciprocal agreement with other areas across the country ---[these don't always apply everywhere--beware!],
2] OR, transferred to wherever the person dies while traveling away from their home area ---[again--this does not work everywhere--beware!]
Burial Insurance does not always even exist reliably: you can pay for it, but it might disappear suddenly--your paid money along with it. OR, the area where death occurred, does not have a reciprocal agreement...which ends up money lost....often many thousands of dollars.
BODY DONATIONS TO SCIENCE:
Medical schools all need cadavers for class use.
They are treated with utmost respect, and all tissues must be accounted for.
But they may not need any when you have a dead person to donate---
Have.A.Back-up.Plan! Colleges and Universities MIGHT facilitate body donations when contacted directly to their medical departments---but usually, not. Most of the several times I called these, they gave no referral where to offer, and, said they "had plenty--go look elsewhere"
A few Companies act as clearing-houses for scientific researches in need of tissues for their projects. These companies collect the deceased, process out whatever tissues are required for whatever studies/researches.
All tissues must be accounted for, then the remains are cremated.
When you donate a body to scientific research, there is no cost to you.
You can have the ashes returned to family, or you can let them dispose of them for you.
No cost.
BUT: there is about a 250# weight limit on bodies being picked up.
ALSO, Have.A.Back-up.Plan!--because if they are replete, they will NOT come get your loved-one's remains.
Here is one company that handles most of the Western USA:
http://medcure.org/body-donation-process/medcure-forms/
IF your loved one travels a lot within the USA, it might be worth it to sign and pay for a higher-priced contract with Neptune Society--because they are National.
As far as I know, they are the only company doing cremations nation-wide.
People can have very strong feelings about how they want their remains handled.
So can their families--who will often go against what the person wanted.
IF you have strong feelings how you want your remains handled, put it in writing, then plan ahead to make sure it gets done as you wish!
We're looking into "Green Burials", because those don't need a coffin, don't use fuel to cremate, no embalming----just bury the body in the ground, maybe wrapped in a sheet or a compostable container--no embalming chemicals to contaminate the ground. This is the lowest-environmental impact. But not all cemeteries allow it---yet. There are only a few green-burial cemeteries in the USA--search online to find where, and look up costs.
I have never heard of the first $100,000. being waive without a Will. An asset, is an asset, is an asset. Even dispersering ones personal belongings should be addressed.
It is Federal Law that Social Security benefits, SSI payments, cannot be garnished by any creditor. If an overpayment of benefits, child support, owe federal taxes (15% can be taken) or federal student loan or agency they can attach funds over $750.00. If government check is deposited in an account that other funds are deposited in then that account could be seized. Keep the accounts separate.
If a person receives monies from Medicaid that state has a right to recoup their money after the person dies. It's only fair. I often hear, let the state pay for their nursing home care, well you and I are paying for that care to a tune of about $8,000.00 or more a month per person.
The trend now is to keep people out of the nursing homes and in the community where individuals are happier and it's cheaper. All part of the Affordable Health Care Act-Community First Choice (persons with disabilities) & Community Option (Long term care).