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California Again Seeks To Pass Human Composting Bill as Catholic Bishops Oppose It

Human Composting Bill
An example vessel that is used in the Natural Organic Reduction process created by Recompose. Photo by Sabel Roizen, courtesy of Recompose

(RNS) — Seeking to legalize the process of converting bodies into soil, a California legislator is attempting, once again, to pass a bill that would allow human composting in the Golden State.

Burial, cremation and alkaline hydrolysis are the only death care choices available in California, and proponents say the new bill, AB 351, “offers another option for individuals who want a different method to honor their remains after death.”

The process for composting a body was introduced by the Seattle-based company Recompose, which is now open for business after the state of Washington legalized the process in 2019. Colorado was the second state to legalize it, followed by Oregon, when Gov. Kate Brown in 2021 signed House Bill 2574 into law. New York’s bill is awaiting Gov. Kathy Hochul’s endorsement.

In California, where the massive number of COVID-19 deaths inundated funeral homes and even led to Los Angeles County’s suspension of air quality regulations on cremation, State Assemblywoman Cristina Garcia, a Democrat who introduced the legislation, said this is another “sad reminder that we must legalize a more environmentally friendly option as soon as possible.”

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Garcia introduced a similar bill in early 2020, but it did not make it out of a Senate committee due to costs. The new bill made it through the Senate Business, Professions, and Economic Development Committee on Monday (June 13).

Here’s how the human composting method works: A dead body is broken down through a process known as Natural Organic Reduction by placing the body in a reusable vessel, covering it with wood chips and aerating it, which creates an environment for microbes and essential bacteria. The body, over a span of about 30 days, is fully transformed into soil.

Catholic bishops have opposed this process in states where human composting has been legalized.

The California Catholic Conference on Tuesday submitted a letter of opposition in reaction to the bill.

Kathleen Domingo, executive director for the California Catholic Conference, said the process “reduces the human body to simply a disposable commodity.”

In the letter, Domingo likened Natural Organic Reduction to methods of disposal of livestock, “not as a means of human burial.” Using this method, Domingo said, “can create an unfortunate spiritual, emotional and psychological distancing from the deceased.”

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Death care specialists say this new and environmentally friendly procedure is crucial as mortuaries fill up and people seek more sustainable practices.

In public testimony, the Oregon bill garnered widespread support, with one Portland resident saying the method provides a “spiritually grounded way” to “return to the land that sustained us in life.” In other parts of the country, people are hoping the process is legalized in their states to, as Cory Ruetten of Maryland put it, “return us to the earth … the way that we were meant to.”

The next scheduled hearing for the proposed measure will be Wednesday with the Senate Health Committee.

This article originally appeared here.

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Molina most recently served as Journalist in Residence at the University of Southern California (USC) and as Equitable Cities Fellow at Next City. She has worked at The Press-Enterprise, La Prensa and OC Excelsior, and The Orange County Register. In 2018, she was named one of the 15 most influential Latina journalists by Latino Journalists of California. She has also received fellowships from the Center for Health Journalism at USC and the Institute for Justice and Journalism. Alejandra is a native Spanish speaker. She received her bachelor’s degree in broadcast journalism from the University of La Verne.