Oklahoma
State Senate
Communications Division
State Capitol
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma 73105
For Immediate Release: February 9, 2012
Inmates’ families to pay for cremations
under Senate legislation
Each year, the Department of Corrections struggles to
keep up with the increasing costs of housing inmates. Many inmates pass
away while incarcerated each year and the families of most of these
individuals bury their loved ones. There are situations, though, where
an inmate doesn’t have any living relatives or his or her designee
declines to accept the individual’s remains for burial. In this
case, DOC pays for the cost of cremation.
Sen. Don Barrington has filed Senate Bill 1069 to allow the agency to
deduct the cost of the cremation from any funds the inmate has accumulated
while incarcerated.
“Although DOC doesn’t currently spend a lot of money on
cremations, there’s still no reason that inmates or their families
or designees shouldn’t be responsible for the expense,”
said Barrington. “My bill would allow DOC to pay for the cremation
using any money the inmate had before transferring the individual’s
belongings to the designee.”
The measure was approved unanimously by the Senate Public Safety Committee
Thursday.
Within three days of entering the custody of DOC, inmates are required
to name a designee to receive whatever possessions and money they have
should they pass away while in jail. During incarceration, inmates build
up what is referred to as a “trust fund” which consists
of funds they earn through working in the prison and money they receive
from their families for toiletries and other necessities. Upon an inmate’s
death, if the designee declines to pay for burial and DOC has to cremate
the individual, the agency will deduct the cost of that procedure from
the balance due to the designee.
According to the Department of Corrections, there were only ten cremations
performed in FY ’11 at a cost of roughly $350 each or a total
of $3,500. The agency expects that number to increase, however, as the
number of inmates age 50 and over has steadily increased in recent decades.
In 1980, there were only 85 inmates in that age bracket making up less
than five percent of the prison population whereas last year there were
over 3,800 making up 15 percent of the population.
“Just as the aging Baby Boomers are affecting our state’s
economy, they’re also impacting our prisons,” explained
Barrington. “With an aging prison population, DOC officials are
concerned that the number of cremations will increase significantly
in the next decade. We need to make sure that the state isn’t
burdened with these growing expenses.”
SB 1069 will next be heard by the full Senate.
For more information contact:
Sen. Barrington: (405) 521-5563