Local veterans take on burial arrangements for deceased veterans without family

By Sharyn  L. Decker
Lewis County Sirens news reporter

CHEHALIS – Retired Navy man Jack Lakely got a call from a friend one day who worked at Morton General Hospital.

She had a question, Lakely said.

“A gentleman she’d become friends with passed away, and she asked me, what do they do with veterans who don’t have family,” he said.

Lakely, who lives in Onalaska, started asking questions, he said. He called the Lewis County Coroner’s Office to find out who takes care of the burials for veterans who die, and have nobody left behind to handle the arrangements, he said.

He was surprised to learn the coroner’s office simply stores the cremated remains of all deceased who are not claimed.

“Come to find out, they had eight others on the shelf,” Lakely said.

The 64-year-old said he spoke with other veterans, members of his local American Legion Post and Veterans of Foreign Wars Post, about the situation.

“They were all appalled, like I was, so we ran with it,” Lakely said.

That was about a month and a half ago. Now, Lakely, Ron Keller of the Chehalis Moose Lodge, Lewis County Coroner Warren McLeod and others have joined together to make sure those nine individuals and any who come after them will get a burial with full military honors at Tahoma National Cemetery in Kent.

The Department of Veteran’s Affairs provides burial and a government headstone for veterans in a National Cemetery, under most conditions and as long as they are not dishonorably discharged, according to the Department of Veteran’s Affairs.

Lakely and others are working with the Kent cemetery to determine the eligibility of each of the nine, although they’re having trouble finding records for one of them, he said.

Eight are men, one is a woman.

Lakely will be handcrafting wooden urns for their each one, and will escort them to Kent, hopefully for a internment on Veteran’s Day, he said.

Coroner McLeod calls it a pilot program. They’ve named it “Operation at Ease” he said today.

“I think it’s great,” McLeod said. “We’ve had vets stopping by all week saying they’d heard about it, and how can they help.”

As it turns out, when McLeod took over the office in January, he found about 25 unclaimed sets of cremated remains being stored, he said.

Under the law, when any person dies without any family to make arrangements, their body is held for 30 days as the coroner attempts to find any relatives, he said.

After that, they are cremated, and stored at the coroner’s office, in case family eventually comes forward, he said. The people they have now go back many years, he said.

Some jurisdictions, instead of keeping them on a shelf indefinitely, have arrangements with local cemeteries, like a “Potters Field”, McLeod said.

But Lewis County does not, McLeod discovered.

He’s exploring ways to get all those people into a cemetery, he said.

“A big part of it is storage space,” he said.

But now, at least eight, or perhaps nine, of those individuals, will be taken of the shelf and placed in a cemetery.

The Chehalis Moose Lodge will be holding a fundraiser – a chicken-fried steak dinner – on Sept. 11, to help Lakely and Moose member Ron Keller, offset some of the costs involved in making that happen.

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2 Responses to “Local veterans take on burial arrangements for deceased veterans without family”

  1. Harry Howard says:

    VFW Post 12012 and American Legion Post 508 of Onalaska are spearheading the effort to get these homeless veterans interred properly at Tahoma Veterans Cemetery. Operation At Ease is in full swing and a procession to transport these Veterans remains to Tahoma Cemetary is planned for November 12 leaving from the Veterans Museum in Chehalis. This procession will be escorted by the American Legion Riders and others as well as supported along the route by other American Legion and VFW. This effort is approved by and fully supported by the Lewis County Coroners Office. The containers for the remains are nearly finished by Jack Lakely and Chuck Coleman. An Account has been set up at Twin Star Credit Union for those who wish to make a donation for this effort as well as for the internment of future homeless Veteran remains that are unclaimed in Lewis County.
    Thank You
    Harry Howard
    Adjuntant
    American Legion Post 508
    Onalaska, Washington

  2. Cristina Rogers says:

    I have a comment to add to this artical, Ron Keller from the Chehalis Moose has had NOTHING to do with the help of taking care of these Veterans. Harvey Chappell (member of Marine Corps League of Lewis Co and Jr. Governor of the Chehalis Moose) and myself, Cristina Rogers (member of Women of the Moose) are the folks from the Moose Lodge that have been working hard to take care of these fallen soldiers. Also, Dr. Adrian Magnison-Whyte who works in Mason County took this problem and ran with it. He has put us in contact with the folks up north that is making all of this happen. I have a hard time when credit is given and accepted by those that do nothing and enjoy the glory ride. Thank you.