Go Green
Rockford Woman editor Jennie Pollock knows that we’re not going to transform our lifestyles overnight, but she looks for ways big and mostly small to protect our planet. Read about her experiences (she’s tried giving up plastic and meat, for example) and share your possible solutions here.

Green funerals. Yes.

June 30th, 2009 at 06:46am Jennie Pollock

At this month’s Women In Business Expo, I briefly met Kristan McNames, funeral director at Grace Funeral and Cremation Services.

It’s a new business at 1340 S. Alpine Road in Rockford (815-395-0559) that carries Ecoffins, caskets made with environmentally sustainable plants like bamboo and willow. This is from the company’s press release:

ecoffin.jpg

A popular choice for woodland burials, Ecoffins will biodegrade naturally along with the body, leaving nothing behind but human remains within six months to one year from the time of burial. Also appropriate for cremation, an added benefit is the lack of toxins released into the environment during the cremation process.

McNames also said she’s exploring the possibility of using environmentally friendly embalming products, since traditional ones employ formaldehyde, a carcinogen. In fact, she’s placing the order any minute.

And to stay with the green theme, she and her husband chose existing construction (at Heartland Church; it feels “more like a coffee shop,” to be more comfortable).

In addition to these green aspects, Grace offers traditional funeral services/products and technological enhancements, including Webcasting of services (live or recorded for later; password-protected, of course) and video tributes.

The business opened within the last month; its grand opening is July 30.

Entry Filed under: Green business

2 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Rick  |  June 30th, 2009 at 8:17 am

    This is a very good and necessary start BUT….Why must we have ANY embalming product foisted upon us? When animals die they fall to the forest floor and become food for other animals and as they decay they become plant food. Why must death in humans be toxified and treated like a final medical procedure?

  • 2. hokumboy  |  July 3rd, 2009 at 3:11 pm

    What’s the price range?
    One can also get a “plain pine box” from
    http://www.trappistcaskets.com/index.asp
    for under $1,000.
    Pine’s one of the most renewable woods and you’d be supporting a good cause, the monks of New Melleray Abbey

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