Obese New Zealanders put the squeeze on cemeteries
New Zealanders’ expanding waistlines are creating a weighty problem for funeral directors, who cannot fit cadavers in their crematories and have resorted to selling double burial plots, reports said yesterday. Funeral Directors Association of New...
New Zealanders’ expanding waistlines are creating a weighty problem for funeral directors, who cannot fit cadavers in their crematories and have resorted to selling double burial plots, reports said yesterday.
Funeral Directors Association of New Zealand president Tony Garing said the size of the standard coffin had increased as obesity rates soared.
“Caskets are getting wider to accommodate people, so it is the width that is the issue,” he told new agency NZPA, adding the standard coffin was now 58 centimetres at the shoulder, up from 48 centimetres.
Noelene Mudgway, manager of Auckland’s Manukau Memorial Gardens, said cremation was not an option for some families saying their last farewell to a supersized loved one.
“Our cremators aren’t wide enough to take people who are severely obese,” she said.
Ms Mudgway said the cemetery tried to accommodate large coffins by burying them in plots at the end of a row, where they would not encroach on other graves.