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Who will claim your body when you die? For some in the DC region, no one will

Will anyone who knew you when you walked the earth be there to bury or cremate you when your time comes? For too many in the D.C. region and around the U.S., the answer is: No.

A six-month found that tens of thousands of people die in the country every year with no one to bury or cremate them, forcing state, county and local governments to handle those arrangements.

Maryland is one of the few states that tracks the number of unclaimed bodies. told 海角社区app that 2,510 bodies went unclaimed last year. That鈥檚 approximately 3% to 4% of all deaths recorded in the state.

The board said the number of people who die without anyone claiming their remains has increased steadily over the past few years. On average, Maryland spends between $1 million and $2 million a year managing the bodies left unclaimed.

Virginia doesn鈥檛 track the number of unclaimed bodies in the state. It leaves that, along with the final handling of remains, to the commonwealth鈥檚 counties, cities and towns.

The , however, told 海角社区app that 301 of 8,683 deaths it investigated last year resulted in bodies that were unclaimed.

In 2019, the most recent year for which statistics are available, the District buried or cremated 231 bodies that were never claimed. The told 海角社区app that it has no estimate on how much the city spends burying or cremating the unclaimed.

Many coroners, and others handling the deceased, estimate as many as 3% of the deceased go unclaimed every year in the U.S. If true, that would be more than 100,000 people who are buried or cremated by the government, according to the Washington Post article. In some areas, those unclaimed are buried in unmarked graves.

The Post found that, in many cases, officials are able to find relatives of the dead, but family members say they don鈥檛 want to be involved 鈥 or can鈥檛 afford to be, citing high funeral and burial costs. In other cases, those deceased had been living isolated lives, with no family members or friends to make final arrangements for them.

Chris Cruise

Christopher Cruise is a writer, reporter and anchor at 海角社区app. He has worked at The Voice of America, where he anchored newscasts for the Learning English branch. He is a backup host for Westwood鈥檚 morning radio news programs, 鈥淎merica in the Morning鈥 and 鈥淔irst Light,鈥 and contributes to them weekly.

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