When environmentalist and reality collide, or ...

Professur

Well-Known Member
There's no room left at the cemetery, so mayor proposes a ban on death

By STAN LEHMAN




BIRITIBA MIRIM, Brazil (AP) - There's no more room to bury the dead, they can't be cremated, and laws forbid a new cemetery. So the mayor of this Brazilian farm town has proposed a solution: outlaw death.

Mayor Roberto Pereira da Silva's proposal to the town council asks residents to "take good care of your health in order not to die" and warns that "infractors will be held responsible for their acts."

The bill, which sets no penalty for passing away, is meant to protest a federal law that has barred a new or expanded cemetery in Biritiba Mirim, a town of 28,000 people 70 kilometres east of Sao Paulo.

"Of course the bill is laughable, unconstitutional, and will never be approved," said Gilson Soares de Campos, an aide to the mayor. "But can you think of a better marketing strategy . . . to persuade the government to modify the environmental legislation that is barring us from building a new cemetery?"

A 2003 decree by Brazil's National Environment Council bars new or expanded cemeteries in so-called permanent preservation areas or in areas with high water tables. Environmental protection measures rule out cremation.

That left no option for Biritiba Mirim, a town on the so-called "green belt" of rich farmland that supplies fruits and vegetables for Sao Paulo, Brazil's biggest city. The town produces 90 per cent of the watercress consumed in Brazil.

Most of Biritiba Mirim sits above the underground water source for about 2 million people in Sao Paulo, de Campos said. The rest is covered by protected forest.

More than 50,000 people already are buried in the 3,500 crypts and tombs in Biritiba Mirim's municipal cemetery, which was inaugurated in 1910.

The cemetery ran out of space last month and 20 residents who have died since November were forced to share a crypt. But even that solution has limits.

"The crypts will be filled to capacity in six months. . . . We have even buried people under the walkways," de Campos said.

"Look, people are going to die. A solution has to be found, or we'll have to break the law."

At least 20 towns within 95 kilometres of Biritiba Mirim have a similar dilemma, de Campos said, though none has ordered its citizens not to die.

Biritiba Marim isn't the first Brazilian town to draw attention with an unusual law. A few years ago, a mayor in Parana state banned the sale of condoms, arguing that his town needed to increase its population to keep qualifying for federal aid. Drugstores ignored the ban.

De Campos said his town wants the Environment Council to change the wording of the cemetery decree to allow exceptions approved by environmentalists.

Biritiba Mirim has set aside public land five times the size of the current graveyard for a new cemetery that environmental experts from the University of Sao Paulo say, "will not affect the region's water tables or surrounding environment," de Campos said.

The Environment Council declined to comment before a meeting to discuss the matter with local officials Thursday.

Source
 
Bury them standing up. You'll quadruple the number of plots in an instant if you can get that passed.
 
Gato_Solo said:
Bury them standing up. You'll quadruple the number of plots in an instant if you can get that passed.


where most of my family is buried in Scotland, you bury them 4 deep in a plot.
 
I hear most homosexuals are against cremation as well...perhaps the thought of being burned twice is too much for them. :D
 
Professur said:
Nice twist. Most people would have hurt themselves trying to reach that far.
:D

There's a place a few blocks from me call Chapel of the Chimes which I toured a few months ago. Cremated remains are stored 8 high. People can visit just the same as if they were buried. Seems like a decent system to me.

int3.jpg
 
flavio said:
:D

There's a place a few blocks from me call Chapel of the Chimes which I toured a few months ago. Cremated remains are stored 8 high. People can visit just the same as if they were buried. Seems like a decent system to me.

int3.jpg

BTW...the only religion I know of that specifically bans cremation is Jehova's Witness. Most have no opinion one way, or the other, as the body is just an empty shell upon death. Burials/funerals are for the living, who are left with the memories, and have a desire to see them as they were in life.
 
For the record, Flav, my cremated father lies with my buried brother. I have no issue with either. But people are entitled to that decision, no?
 
Anyone who actually READ THE STORY would know that cremation is outlawed there due to environmental protection measures.
 
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