Dying trend: Burials are out, so cemetery hopes it can cash in

Consumers are choosing cremation over burial. That slow, steady change in the market — in the works for several decades — has cemeteries scrambling for new ways to turn a profit or ensure they can pay for future maintenance.

In River View’s case, the cemetery’s board of trustees wants to turn 120 acres of vacant graveyard land into houses, apartments or perhaps an annex to Lewis & Clark College. They’ve filed a Measure 37 claim with the city to do it and, in the documents, state the case plainly: At the current rate, it would take 400 years to use up all the potential grave sites at one of the city’s premier historic burial grounds.

“This is a very traditional business,” says David Noble, the Southwest Portland cemetery’s executive director. “But it’s like anything else: Markets change and you adjust.”

Forty years ago, fewer than 5 percent of Americans who died opted for cremation. In 1987, it was 15 percent. This year, more than 32 percent of U.S. deaths will end in cremation, and the experts at the Cremation Association of North America expect the national total to pass 50 percent within 25 years.

Cremations are generally cheaper, starting at about $1,500 compared with the $6,000 or so you’ll shell out for a basic burial. Many people also consider them more environmentally friendly. And they provide a dead person’s loved ones more flexibility about how and when to memorialize.

The procedure — which can be boiled down to this stark reality: four hours at 1,600 degrees — is even more popular in Oregon than it is nationwide. Sixty-five percent of Oregonians who die will choose cremation this year.

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The Sorted Books Project

The Sorted Books project began in 1993 years ago and is ongoing. The project has taken place in many different places over the years, ranging form private homes to specialized public book collections. The process is the same in every case: culling through a collection of books, pulling particular titles, and eventually grouping the books into clusters so that the titles can be read in sequence, from top to bottom.

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Camoflaged Bibles are Popular in the South

outdoorsmanbibletn250_.jpegAn on-line outdoor retailer in the United States is selling camouflaged Bibles, a curious product which says a lot about American culture.

“Our NIV (New International Version) Bible in Realtree camo is our best selling item, followed closely by our camo Bible cover,” said David Lingner, the president of Arkansas-based Christian Outdoorsman, which sells Christian-themed hunting and angling products online.

The cover of this Bible is graced by leaves and tree bark. This enables the devout who also hunt to take their Bible into the woods with them while concealing it from their prey.

The C in Christian on the shop’s Web site is shaped like a fish hook while the O in Outdoorsman has a cross-shaped rifle scope site inside of it.

Also on offer is a camo waterproof Bible. “Water, ice or condensation will not damage this durable word of God,” proclaims the on-line sales pitch.

Such products are classically American and highlight cultural traits which are especially pronounced in the South.

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