Oregon Special Cemetery Gift Trust Fund

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Multi-State
Control #:
US-00767BG
Format:
Word; 
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Description

The following form is a sample of a possible trust fund set up by family members of people interred in a cemetery who wish to restore the cemetery and provide for its maintenance.
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FAQ

While there is no specific designation for natural or green burial with the Oregon Mortuary and Cemetery Board, the Forest Conservation Burial Ground, where Robert Trottmann now rests, is in the process of becoming the first cemetery in Oregon to be certified as a conservation burial site through the Green Burial

There are no laws that prohibit home burial, but you must check local zoning laws before establishing a home cemetery or burying on private land. It is legally required to hire a Funeral Director to handle certain parts of the funeral. Bodies must be buried in an established cemetery.

Every cemetery authority that operates a cemetery may place its cemetery under endowed care and establish, maintain and operate an endowment care fund. The provisions of this subsection shall not apply to a city or county owned cemetery, unless the city or county has elected to subject itself to ORS 97.810 to 97.865.

A nonendowment care cemetery is one that does not have deposited in an endowment care fund the minimum amounts required by law.

The law does not require a casket. So, you can completely skip the casket and potentially the embalming process if you so desire.

Oregon families may bury on their own property if certain conditions are met. (Go to How to Arrange Disposition.) Embalming is not required in Oregon unless a person dies from a communicable disease (HIV or AIDS, diphtheria, hepatitis B, C, or D, plague, rabies, tularemia, or tuberculosis).

Some cemeteries also sell endowed or perpetual care services. This means the buyer pays money to the cemetery and the cemetery holds that money and invests it.

Most bodies are buried in established cemeteries, but burial on private property may be possible in Oregon. Oregon law states that you may establish a cemetery if you: own the property.

A cemetery endowment care trust fund is designed to ensure that income will always be available for the continued maintenance and upkeep of the cemetery, even when all the interment spaces are sold.

A nonendowment care cemetery is one that does not have deposited in an endowment care fund the minimum amounts required by law.

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Oregon Special Cemetery Gift Trust Fund