For the purposes of this chapter, the terms used herein are defined as follows:
The opening and closing of a space in the ground for the interment of a deceased human being.
A legal document issued by the Monroe County Health Department or other authority that authorizes the final disposition of human remains.
All lands now or hereafter within the limits of Mount Hope or Riverside Cemetery, respectively.
That person designated by the Commissioner to have responsibility for the day-to-day maintenance and operation of the cemeteries.
The personnel at the administrative offices located at Mount Hope and Riverside Cemeteries.
A structure, either freestanding or part of another building, containing niches for the inurnment of cremains.
The Commissioner of Environmental Services.
The remains of a body after cremation.
The reduction to bone fragments and powder by heat of the remains of a deceased human being.
The opening and closing of a burial space in the ground for the interment of cremains.
A structure containing a retort used for the reduction of bodies of deceased persons to cremains.
A memorial that contains one or more receptacles designed to house cremains.
A space in a mausoleum which is designed to receive a casket.
A document conveying a right of interment in specific cemetery property.
The removal of human remains by exhumation, disentombment, or disinurnment.
The practice whereby two full body burials are permitted in the same grave space, provided that the owner elects this option at the time of the first interment. The first grave is then dug to a deeper depth to permit the subsequent interment of another deceased individual on top of the first.
The act of placing human remains in a crypt.
The base or footing on which a memorial is installed.
A section of the cemetery containing interment spaces which may be identified by a particular area or section by name and by the type, size, design and material of memorial authorized.
A space of ground in the cemetery that is used for the interment of a deceased human being.
A ground interment of the body remains of a deceased individual that does not involve the use of an outer burial container.
Spouse, domestic partner, child, parent, grandparent, grandchild, and sibling.
The disposition of human remains by inurnment, entombment, or burial.
A space intended for the final disposition of human remains, including, but not limited to, a grave space, mausoleum crypt, columbarium, and lawn crypt or niche.
The permanent placement of cremated remains in an urn and placement of the urn in a niche or crypt.
Burial vault placed underground prior to actual burial at the time a section or garden of the cemetery is being developed.
A parcel or tract of land containing more than one individual grave site which is intended for use as a burial place for human remains.
Flat memorial that is installed flush with the ground.
Any physical identification of an interment space. This includes, but is not limited to, monuments, markers, lettering or vases applied to community mausoleum and columbaria crypt or niche fronts, private columbaria, statuary, or cremorials.
An upright memorial, including large structures like obelisks, usually made from granite.
A space within a columbarium or mausoleum used or intended to be used for the inurnment of cremains of a deceased person.
A receptacle used for the communal placement of cremated human remains without benefit of an urn or any other container in which cremated remains may be commingled with other cremated remains.
A container which is designated for placement in the grave space around the casket, including, but not limited to, containers commonly known as "burial vaults" or "grave boxes."
A person having ownership interest in a parcel of cemetery property.
When dealing with cemetery property, the right of interment, the right to erect monuments and the right of possession, care and control of cemetery property and shall not mean ownership in fee simple absolute.
The dispersal of cremains that need not be associated with an interment right or issuance of a deed.
A location set aside within the cemetery that is used for the spreading or broadcasting of cremains that have been removed from their container and can be mixed with or placed on top of the soil or ground cover or buried in an underground receptacle on a commingled basis.
A receptacle designed to contain human cremains.
An outdoor area in the cemetery designated to be used for the underground burial of human cremains, or placement aboveground of small cremorials.
A container designed for placement in a grave space to hold an urn.