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These unclaimed dead bodies are stuck in limbo in freezers outside the Health Sciences Centre

Cold storage containers outside of the Health Sciences Centre in St. John's house about 28 unclaimed cadavers, and there's no immediate plan to cremate or bury them.

Cadavers accumulating in storage units as cost of living and dying rises

Five white trucking containers are placed on a concrete slab. A green dumpster is next to them.
These freezer containers, holding about 28 bodies at last count, sit in an alley between the Janeway children's hospital and Memorial University's school of medicine. (Danny Arsenault/CBC)

A smattering of nondescriptstorage containers sit nestled on a concrete slab ina back alley in St. John's, taking up a couple of hundred square feet between the Janewaychildren's hospital and Memorial University's school of medicine.

A large, bright green dumpster is pushed up against the rail that cordons them off.

Anyone making use of the nearby busy parking lot only a stone's throw away would likely pay no attention to the scene.

Butthe containers are actually freezer units, and inside are dozens of corpses in body bags.Twenty-eight was the most recent number they held,CBC News confirmed,but that number changes daily as bodies are added or removed during the night.

The morgue at the Health Sciences Centre in St. John's uses the containers as overflow storage. Bodies are placed in the freezers until the next of kin canclaimthem.

But some are no longer claiming the bodies of their loved ones. Inflationand the cost of living areeating away at pocketbooks, leaving very little left over forthe costs of cremation or other funeral services.

That means the bodies have begun to pile up.

Four of the 28 are under the jurisdiction ofDr. Nash Denic, the province's chief medical examiner. Denic does have the authority to order a cremation, but only for bodies of suspicious deaths.One body is a Jane Doe unidentified. The rest have not been claimed by the next of kin.

Government support

Sources say the situation is growing worse. The morgue has had bodies piled up two perstretcherand in the hallways. The cold storageunits have never been this full.

And as prices rise across the board, Newfoundland and Labrador's population grows older. About 5,500 people die here every year. As more people can't afford to claim the remains, the province's solution is the freezer units.

Government assistance is available for some who can't afford the cremation and funeral costs, but the payout rates haven't changed in nearly two decades.

WATCH | The CBC's Anthony Germain reports on the growing number of bodies being stored outside in freezer trucks:

Cost of dying: Corpses are being stored in freezer trucks as people leave loved ones bodies unclaimed

7 months ago
Duration 0:55
While Newfoundland and Labrador Health Services is planning a permanent cadaver storage unit at the Health Sciences Centre in St. Johns, there are now four freezer trucks that hold bodies outside the hospital. As the CBCs Anthony Germain reports, its a problem that started getting worse when the cost of living and dying started climbing.

Relatives may get upto $2,338 to help with cremation or burial costs.

A statement fromDepartment of Children, Seniors and Social Developmentspokesperson Gayle St. Croixsays the department handed outgrantstoabout 360 people in 2022-23,totallingabout $990,000 in benefits.

Of those 360 people, about250 were onincome support at the time of death and 110 were people with qualifying low incomes.

The department said its budget for funeral benefits is part of the annual budget processand any changes in demand will be included in future budget reviews. It also said it will begin examining the grant limits in April and take input from funeral home operators.

"Our goal in the review of funeral benefits is to streamline, simplify and improve the benefit rate structure so that is easier to understand and administer, and to improve the application process for families,"reads thestatement.

Permanent storage coming

Current laws don't fully cover death by natural causes or lay out who has the authority to dispose of bodies.

There arealso no potter's fields or common graves to bury unknown andunclaimed bodies.

That leaves the bodiesin limbo, since if N.L. Health Services were to unilaterally decideto cremate a body,it's possible a relative might come forward after the fact to claim that's not what the person wanted.

The policy issue involves at least two provincial government departments.

White and blue storage containers with wooden railings.
Government assistance is available for some who can't afford cremation and funeral costs, but the payout rates haven't changed in nearly two decades. (Patrick Butler/Radio-Canada)

The Department of Justice can appoint a public trustee to help people who are noton income support. That person assesses the household income.

The Department of Children, Seniors and Social Development has a nine-page form forpeople who are not receiving income support to fill out.There is a burial unit a team located in Gander that assesses the paperwork, but that still takestime.

N.L. Health Services, which is in charge oforderingthe freezer trucks and arranges the movement of bodies, told CBC News in a statementit shares the morgue with the Office of the Chief Medical Examinerat the Health Sciences Centre.

But it'll soon have a more permanent solution for the overflow of unburied remains:a permanent storage unit at the Health Sciences Centre.

That construction will begin in the coming months, according to the health authority's statement. Bodies that go unclaimed by next of kin will be handled by an appointed public trustee, who may eventually send them to a funeral home.

The permanent storage unit will preserve the bodies during that process, the health authority said.

It's not clear where on hospital grounds that storage unit will be located.

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