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Panel advances bill modernizing funeral, cemetery rules and authorizing natural organic reduction

February 03, 2026 | 2026 Legislature FL, Florida


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Panel advances bill modernizing funeral, cemetery rules and authorizing natural organic reduction
Representative Oliver presented HB 12 31 as a consumer-protection and workforce-modernization package for Florida’s funeral, cemetery and final-disposition industry and offered a strike-all amendment that, she said, “authorizes and regulates natural organic reduction, which is sometimes called human composting.”

The bill, as described by Representative Oliver, aims to strengthen safeguards for families, ease licensure by endorsement for experienced professionals moving into Florida and clarify operational standards for establishments. She told the committee the measure is intended to protect consumers at vulnerable moments and to expand career pathways in the industry.

Members questioned specific provisions. Representative Hart Lohman asked whether the bill prevents certain providers from becoming sole providers for hospices; Representative Oliver said the measure prohibits contracts that would leave a hospice tied to a single funeral provider, explaining such arrangements can “lead to a lack of consumer choice and confusion.” Representative Henson raised concerns about a provision that restricted issuance or renewal of direct-disposal licenses; Oliver responded that the strike-all amendment removes that limiting provision.

On natural organic reduction, Representative Oliver said the process leaves “about 1 cubic yard of, essentially, soil that can be spread in a garden,” and described it as an alternate, dignified option some families choose. The strike-all amendment was adopted without objection. There was no public testimony; several industry representatives registered or waived support.

After brief debate and expressions of support from members who had met with industry representatives, the committee voted to report HB 12 31 favorably with a committee substitute.

The bill will move to the next stage of committee consideration consistent with House procedures; the committee transcript records the vote and the bill as reported favorably with the committee substitute.

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