Often Asked
What purpose does a funeral serve?
What do funeral directors do?
Must you have a funeral director to bury the dead?
Funeral Services
Why have a public viewing?
What is the purpose of embalming?
Does a dead body have to be embalmed, according to law?
Is cremation a substitute for a funeral?
Cost
How much does a funeral cost?
What determines the cost of a funeral?
Do you accept credit cards?
Who pays for funerals for the indigent?
Planning
What should be done when a death occurs?
What if death occurs away from home?
Often Asked Questions
What purpose does a funeral serve?
It is the customary way to recognize death and its finality.
Funerals are recognized rituals for the living to show respect
for the dead and to help survivors begin the grief process. Funerals
in one form or another have been conducted to honor the dead
since around 35,000 BC.
What do funeral directors do?
It has been estimated that over 136 individual activities must
take place in order for one funeral to be conducted. Funeral
directors are caregivers and administrators. They make the arrangements
for transportation of the body, complete all necessary paperwork,
and implement the choices made by the family regarding the funeral
and final disposition of the body.
Funeral directors are listeners, advisors and supporters. They
have experience assisting the bereaved in coping with death.
Funeral directors are trained to answer questions about grief,
recognize when a person is having difficulty coping, and recommend
sources of professional help. Funeral directors also link survivors
with support groups at the funeral home or in the community.
Must you have a funeral director to bury the dead?
Yes. In New York State, a licensed funeral director or undertaker
must be present and personally supervise the interment or cremation,
or the pick-up from or delivery to a common-carrier of a dead
human body. (NYS Sanitary Code Part 77.7(a)(4)) Further, a licensed
funeral director must sign and file the certificate of death
with the registrar in the district in which the death occurred.
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Back to top Funeral Service Questions
Why have a public viewing?
Viewing is a part of many cultural and ethnic traditions. Many
grief specialists believe that viewing aids the grief process
by helping the bereaved recognize the reality of death. Viewing
is encouraged for children, as long as the process is explained
and the activity is voluntary.
What is the purpose of embalming?
Embalming sanitizes and preserves the body, retards the decomposition
process and enhances the appearance of a body disfigured by traumatic
death or illness.
Embalming makes it possible to lengthen the time between death
and the final disposition, thus allowing family members time
to arrange and participate in the type of service most comforting
to them.
Does a dead body have to be embalmed, according to law?
No. However, embalming may be required by the funeral home in
conjunction with other services, such as open casket viewing.
Is cremation a substitute for a funeral?
No. Cremation is an alternative to earth burial
or entombment for the body's final disposition and often follows
a traditional funeral service. In fact, according to FTC figures,
direct cremation occurs in only a small percentage of deaths.
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Cost Questions
How much does a funeral cost?
The latest studies show that the average charge for an adult,
full-service funeral in all of New York State was $6,700; this
includes a professional service charge, transfer of remains,
embalming, other preparation, use of viewing facilities, use
of facilities for ceremony, hearse, limousine and casket. (Vault,
cemetery and monument charges are additional.) At the Smolarek
Funeral Home, we take great pride in our reputation of excellence
in providing families with the most affordable and reasonable
prices in the area.
What determines the cost of a funeral?
The family of the deceased does. The cost of a funeral will
depend on how elaborate or how simple a ceremony is desired.
Funeral directors offer a wide variety of services to choose
from.
Remember, a funeral home is a 24-hour, labor intensive business
with extensive facilities (viewing rooms, chapels, limousines,
hearses, etc.) and these expenses must be factored into the cost
of a funeral. Moreover, the cost of a funeral includes not only
merchandise, like caskets, but the services of a funeral director
in making arrangements, filing appropriate forms, dealing with
doctors, ministers, florists, newspapers, etc. and seeing to
all the necessary details.
Do you accept credit cards?
Yes. As an added convenience to families, the Smolarek Funeral
Home accepts Visa, Mastercard, American Express and Discover
cards as proper forms of payment.
Who pays for funerals for the indigent?
Other than the family, there are veteran, union, and other organizational
benefits to pay for funerals, including, in certain instances,
a lump sum death payment from Social Security. In most states,
some form of public aid allowances are available from the state
and vary by county.
Most funeral directors are aware of the various benefits and
know how to obtain them for the indigent. However, funeral directors
often absorb costs above and beyond what is provided by agencies
to insure a respectable burial for the deceased. (source: NYSFDA)
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Planning
What should be done when a death occurs?
Contact our Funeral Home as soon a possible. Our licensed directors
are available 24 hours a day, seven days a week to assist you
and your family at a time of need and to answer all your questions.
What if death occurs away from home?
When funeral arrangements must unexpectedly be made away from
home, it is difficult to consider what to do first. If you want
to limit costs, the best practice is to contact the funeral firm
in the area where the funeral service and burial is to take place.
CALL THE SMOLAREK FUNERAL HOME AT 716-668-3122 day or night.
We will instantly make all the necessary calls and arrangements
for you to ensure the timely transport and return of your loved
one back to our local funeral home and for final funeral services
and disposition.
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