6 results across bills, operators, posts, and people
This bill cuts Michigan's mandatory cremation waiting period in half — from 48 hours to 24 — and, for the first time, writes alkaline hydrolysis (water cremation) into state law with its own permit category. For most funeral homes it means faster turnaround on cremation cases and a clear legal path to add a service that is currently in a gray area.
This bill makes water cremation legal in Ohio for the first time. It sets up licensing for aquamation facilities and writes environmental discharge standards. Having passed the House 67–32, it is the furthest-along disposition bill in the region and a likely template for neighboring states.
Field report from Flint, MI: We've seen a 34% increase in direct cremation requests in Q1 2026 compared to Q1 2025. Families are citing price. The gap between a traditional service and direct cremation has grown to $4,200+ in this market. This is a real pressure point HB 4133 pricing transparency needs to address.
What's the actual timeline for the Michigan Board of Mortuary Science to update the cremation technician continuing education requirements if HB 4521 passes? Has anyone spoken directly with the MBMS about the rule-making process? The 12-month implementation window seems optimistic.
State of Deathcare — Michigan, May 2026: Five bills in active session touching funeral homes, cemeteries, and cremation. SB 892 is furthest along (Senate floor). SB 1017 public hearing was productive; expect amendments on the cancellation fee cap. HB 4521 still in committee — need more testimony from operators. Show up.