HomeLocal NewsNew YorkNew York legalizes human composting

New York legalizes human composting

Published on

New York Governor Kathy Hochul on Saturday legalized the human composting law. The law is aimed at a natural organic reduction after death, which basically means an eco-friendly solution to burial and cremation to transform human remains into life-giving soil.

Now the State of New York became the sixth state in the country to to legalize human composting.

Washington became the first state to legalize human composting in 2019. Colorado and Oregon followed suit in 2021 and Vermont and California approved it in 2022.

The 60-day-long chemical-free process involves putting a person’s remains in a “vessel” with organic material such as straw, alfalfa or sawdust. The box is sealed and attached to an HVAC system, and the remains are allowed to decompose. At the 30-day mark, the contents are screened for inorganic material and remaining bone is broken up and put back in. After another 30 days, the contents are returned to the family.

Comments

Latest news

IDF Probes Soldier Seen Smashing Jesus Statue in Lebanese Christian Village

The Israeli military opened a probe after a soldier was seen damaging a Jesus statue in Debel, a Christian village in southern Lebanon.

Iranian-born U.S. resident arrested at LAX in alleged Iran arms deal tied to Sudan

Federal authorities arrested Shamim Mafi at Los Angeles International Airport on allegations she brokered Iranian-made weapons sales allegedly tied to Sudan, prosecutors said.

Qatar says foreign airlines to gradually resume operations via Hamad airport

Qatar’s civil aviation authority said foreign airlines can gradually resume operations through Hamad International Airport under phased safety and security measures.

Iran Rejects New U.S. Talks, Rules Out Nuclear Stockpile Transfer

Iran said it has no intention of holding another round of talks with the United States and ruled out any transfer of its nuclear stockpiles.

More like this