Can you buried your own property




















Email: pollution. You may also wish to contact the Environment Agency to see if the property is in a sensitive environmental area, or is prone to flooding. Contact details and further information is available on the Environment Agency website. You do not need planning permission for a home burial for a single grave or even a small number of graves, as long as there is no material "change of use".

Planning permission may be required if large monuments are erected. If you do not intend to stay in your house for more than a few years, then burying a relative's remains in the back garden is probably not appropriate for a number of reasons:. Read more about applying for an exhumation on the GOV. UK website. The burial plot should be away from the house and away from services such as drainage, cables and gas supplies.

This is especially important if any extensions or repairs are carried out in the future, to avoid disturbing the remains. The burial plot should be deep enough to prevent foraging animals from disturbing the body, and should have at least one metre of subsoil below its base and at least one metre of soil above the coffin. The grave should not contain any standing water when it is first dug and should not be dug in very sandy soil.

This should reduce the likelihood of the walls of the grave caving in when excavating the ground. Further advice on groundwater pollution and where to position burial plots in sensitive areas is available on the GOV. Skip to main content. Home Public health Cemeteries and crematoria Interments and memorials Private cemeteries and burials.

Private cemeteries and burials. On this page. Key messages Burials in religious or indigenous burial grounds Burials on private property Burial outside a public cemetery — examples Additional options. Key messages You cannot bury human remains outside a public cemetery without approval from the Secretary to the department. The department will usually only consider private burials where pre-existing burials exist at that location. You may bury cremated remains on private property without department approval.

This provision has been drafted to ensure that: human remains are disposed of legally, appropriately and with dignity these remains can be traced and identified regardless of whether they are interred in a private or public cemetery. Burials in religious or indigenous burial grounds Under s. Burials on private property Under s. A Parliamentary Joint Select Committee recommended in that burials not be permitted on private property due to: no one having responsibility for the creation and preservation of an adequate burial record no one being responsible for ongoing maintenance of the grave there being no guarantee that ownership of land will not change hands in the future, and that the land will not be used in a way that compromises the integrity of any grave difficulties in ensuring compliance with appropriate legislation regarding burials.

I really like your post and surely appreciate your experience that you have discussed in the blog. Thanks for sharing. For some reason I am under the impression that this part of the act was changed recently, making it more prohibitive with respect to burial on private land. Is this so? Hi Cassandra, thank you for asking us a question here! The Act has not changed in recent years there were some small changes to the regulation in but not related to this issue.

In terms of a rough estimate, it might be best for you to phone us as we would like to ask you questions about your situation. Would that be possible? Our toll-free number is and we are here Monday to Friday, 9 a. In the middle of a large bench land field is a burial graveyard surrounded by barbed wire with approx. Her children are buried there. I spread her remaining ashes there. My cousin is a former Chief of Fountain and he was surprised about this burial ground on private property.

I talked to the owners who said it is a registered burial ground. I can be contacted at bankerhugh shaw. Hi Hugh, thanks for reaching out to us here with your question.

I have passed your info along to the appropriate people in our organization and someone will be in touch shortly. On Iceland, near Reykjavik, to meet the legal requirements, a farmer built a little church and next to it established a small one grave graveyard to fulfill the last wishes of his dying young wife. People need to really be challenging the government on all these issues.

For the other provinces that allow on farm burials, the rules and regulations are somewhat similar. None allow a burial in any place other than a cemetery and they all require that the applicant establish that cemetery within certain regulations. Generally, there is a licensing fee plus an annual charge to retain the license.

But usually in the case of on farm cemeteries, with fewer than 10 burials per year, the annual charge is waived. In Saskatchewan, for example, the first step is to get permission from your rural municipality RM.

In short, the registrar of cemeteries needs to know that you want to establish a cemetery, that you own the land where the cemetery will be located and that the rural municipality in which the cemetery will be located is okay with your plans.

The applicant must also supply two paper copies of a plan prepared by a qualified person, or a reasonable scale drawing for the proposed cemetery showing the subdivision of the cemetery into lots and plots. A lot is space for one grave, a plot is space for two. A draftsman may prepare a plan according to instructions without viewing the property.

The owner must stake out the cemetery according to the plan. The cemetery must be located on suitable ground rocky or sandy soil may create future problems at least m from any watercourse or well and at least m from any waste disposal ground. Unless given special permission by the Registrar the cemetery shall not be located less than 55 m from the centre of a public highway.

Public access must be provided. Roads at least seven metres in width are to be arranged throughout the cemetery so that every grave lot will be within 75 metres of a road. The cemetery must also have access to a public road at two or more locations or a suitable turning area at least 15 m in diameter.

Records must be kept showing the name of each deceased person in the cemetery, the location of each grave and the date of each interment. The registrar says he gets about three or four applications for a farm cemetery each year. Once it becomes a cemetery public access must be provided.



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