Implementing Eco-Friendly Practices
Tukios Websites • July 5, 2008
Bill Cress, President of Cress Funeral Service and Amanda Conway, Funeral Director at Cress, spoke at the 2008 National Selected Independent Funeral Homes Convention in Washington D.C. at a session entitled, “Beyond the Talk: Implementing Eco-Friendly Practices”. Together they highlighted their efforts to implement green burial options for families and how to change the environmental impact of the funeral home’s daily business operations.



Nothing means more to a grieving child, spouse, sister, brother or friend than a personal note from the deceased. It’s something that will be cherished. The note will make its way out of it’s safe keeping spot whenever the mourner needs to feel close to the person who died. It will be read on those tearful days that are sure to come. It will also be read on those days that are full of joyful remembrance.

Writing thank you notes is usually one of the very first “after the funeral” tasks you will undertake. You may be surprised to find that your brain/hand coordination is not working so well. You sit there with pen in hand and well-formed thoughts in your head, but somehow it all gets lost between the head and the paper. Don’t despair. This is normal and it’s all part of the grief journey.

Yesterday, Jane was on duty as a tour guide at a lovely little pre-revolutionary war church in rural Virginia. It was late in the afternoon when a youngish woman wearing shorts and a Cubs ball hat stepped into the visitor’s center looking lost. Thinking that she might need directions, Jane quietly approached to offer her assistance. The seemingly lost young lady said she just wanted to go in the church.








