The Martha Rosa Association, Inc

The Martha Rosa Association, Inc The Martha-Rosa Association Inc. Helping one family at a time. The Martha - Rosa Association, Inc.

The Martha Rosa Association, Inc

We are in need of an office space donation for a non-profit association, which would be a great write-off on your taxes. Services
Assisting Indigent Families During a Difficult Time,
While everybody deserves a proper burial, not everyone they have left behind can afford to give them one. we will assist you in purchasing the following, ( although we give no money,

we have companies who will assist us with the following items at little cost to you :
Caskets
Headstones
Urns
It is our mission to help indigent families in our community and surrounding counties buy caskets, urns, and flowers for their deceased. We want to ease your pain by assisting you in burial, transportation of deceased and funeral home needs as well.(WE DO NOT PROVIDE FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE)
Our organization aims to educate people from all walks of life on whom they can contact when they have no burial or life insurance. Our Vision
We are a nonprofit organization that aims to provide essential services to bereaved families in need. Our Core Values
When we become a brick and mortar location , we will be able to offer more of :
� � � � � �
Food, Clothing, and Other Needs, as Required During Burial. Giving Compassionate, Caring and Nurturing Attention and Guidance to Bereaved Family Members. Educating Family Members on How to Obtain Additional Assistance and Resources for Burial Needs. Giving Dependable, Consistent, and Comprehensive Services and Guidance to Grieving Family Members. Taking the burden off the family by helping with gathering insurance policies, will and testament, obituaries, location of family members, going to funeral home on your behalf, and much more. To make a donation and to receive a tax deduction their are several options , contact us. https://facebook.com/wehelpyouthroughyourhardtime/
Thank you and God bless

Visit https://squareup.com/store/flint-caskets-and-memorialsWe can help
01/02/2019

Visit
https://squareup.com/store/flint-caskets-and-memorials
We can help

We understand that the loss of a dear loved one can be very emotional and tramitic, but to be overcharged for an casket or headstone is an even harder blow to deal with. Our mission is to provide excellent products at an affordable price

12/09/2018

HOW TO PRE-PLAN YOUR ENTIRE FUNERAL SERVICE WITHOUT PREENED INSURANCE.

SAVE THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS BY FOLLOWING OUR SIMPLE COURSE, OR YOU CAN PROCEED WITH THE STANDARD PREPLAN INSURANCE.

DID YOU KNOW THAT -- ● Is your funeral plan worth the money?
● Will you be paying more for the
insurance than the cost of the funeral?
● Will your premiums increase and will
you be able to keep paying them?
Ask “what will my premiums be in 5
years?”
● Read the fine print! Most insurers
only cover accidental death in the
first year (or two), if you die from a
terminal illness in this time you may
not be covered.

Other ways to pay
for a funeral:
Pre-paid
funerals
Best if there’s no chance
you’ll move interstate
before you die and the
company is reputable.
You can usually pay by
instalments.
Funeral
Bonds
An investment product
that accrues interest.
High
Interest
Savings
Account
Opening a joint-bank
account in your name,
and the name of a family
member who can access
the funds after you die.
Super
& Life
Insurance
When you die your super
fund will pay out your
super balance and any
related life insurance to
your family. You may also
be able to get early release
of your super if you have a
terminal illness.

OR

ORDER YOUR BOOKLET TODAY: HOW TO PREPLAN YOUR ENTIRE FUNERAL SERVICE WITH OUT COSTLY PRENEED INSURANCE.

YOUR CHOICE

12/02/2018

Visit us first

10/10/2018

10 things funeral directors don’t want you to know
ELLEN GOODSTEIN
NOVEMBER 18, 2003
in
CAREER
Most Americans avoid planning their funerals and instead leave the decisions to their loved ones. But making arrangements immediately after a death can be unnecessarily expensive because it’s such an emotional time.

“The unsuspecting consumer is setting himself up to be vulnerable to excessive spending on items and services that he doesn’t need or want,” declares Joshua Slocum, executive director of the Vermont-based Funeral Consumers Alliance, a not-for-profit consumer information and advocacy group.

FCA fields calls from angry and confused consumers everyday.

“I just spoke with a woman who had asked for a very modest service for a loved one,” says Slocum. “She paid $7,000 for funeral services when what she really wanted should have cost her around $1,500. She was sold embalming, which she didn’t need, and the markup on the casket was excessive. Costs add up quickly
According to AARP, funeral and burial costs can easily reach as much as $10,000. The average cost of a traditional adult funeral in 1999 was $5,020 without any extras. Burial costs can add an extra $2,000 or more. Flowers, obituary notices, burial liners or vaults, limousines, acknowledgement cards — they all add up to a major expenditure.

“Funeral services are one of the largest purchases consumers will make, right up there with a car and a house,” explains Brenda Mack, a public affairs specialist with the Federal Trade Commission.

It’s important to take your time when deciding on the funeral service. Don’t let yourself be pressured into buying goods or services you don’t want, and then end up having to spend years paying off the funeral, says Mack. Become an informed consumer.

Here are a few examples of what some funeral directors would rather you not know.

1. Shopping around for funeral services can save you thousands of dollars.

“Consumers need to apply the same level of savvy to funeral purchases as they would to anything else,” advises Slocum.

Don’t assume a funeral will cost the same just about anywhere. It’s not so.

“By federal law, funeral providers have to give consumers a general price list of all goods and services without the consumer having to ask for it,” notes Mack.

“As soon as a person tells a funeral director, ‘I want to talk about your services,’ the consumer must be handed a written list of all goods and services offered by the funeral home and what they cost.” Typically included would be costs for the initial conference, consultations, paperwork and overhead. This fee, called a “nondeclinable fee,” is added to the total cost of the funeral. There is wide variation in pricing of the nondeclinable fee, cautions FCA’s Slocum.

The general price list should also include cost of transportation of the body, care of the body (including embalming), and use of the funeral home for viewing, wake, visitation and funeral or memorial ceremony. Alternative arrangements such as cremation and optional services such as flowers, placing an obituary and obtaining a death certificate should also be listed on the general price list.

Use the price list and shop among funeral providers to find the most reasonably priced service, advises Mack. 2. Funeral directors are not clergy.

Funeral directors are business people. They are not ministers, but people often treat them as quasi-clergy, notes Slocum. “This is a mistake. Consumers tend to trust them implicitly and believe everything they say. Remember, funeral homes are in business to make money.”

Check out the funeral home before you arrange services through them, advises Diana Evans, bureau chief of funeral and cemetery services for the Florida Department of Financial Services.

“You want to be sure you go to somebody who is licensed and has a good reputation in the community. Ask for recommendations from your friends or your rabbi or priest. Even go to a funeral and see how professionally they conduct their business,” she says.

Call and speak with a funeral director before visiting, suggests David Walkinshaw, a spokesman for the National Funeral Director’s Association and operator of Saville and Gannon Funeral Home in Arlington, Mass.

“Usually within a few minutes of talking to a funeral director, you can get a feel for who they are. You can hear professionalism. Make sure you’re comfortable and, if not, call somebody else.”

3. Embalming is rarely required when the person will be buried within 24 to 48 hours.

The United States and Canada are the only countries in the world that routinely embalm their dead. Embalming is not a matter of protecting the public health, as some unscrupulous morticians would have you believe, says Slocum. The Centers for Disease Control has consistently shown that embalming does not serve any public health purpose.

“Refrigeration is almost always a legal alternative,” urges Slocum, who says it’s just as good if not better than embalming.

Funeral directors routinely refuse to have a public viewing without embalming, but it is not a legal requirement except in Minnesota.

Know your rights, advises Slocum. If the funeral home insists, ask for a private viewing without embalming.

4. Seeing your loved one prior to burial without the benefit of embalming will not leave you with unresolved grief issues.

“This is a myth,” notes Slocum. “There are no objective studies that bear this out. Embalming is an incredibly invasive process — there’s nothing gentle about it. It’s strictly a temporary cosmetic and preservative process.”

“If more people knew what embalming entailed, they would not choose to do it,” says Slocum.

5. Sealed caskets cannot preserve a body.

Sealed caskets cost hundreds of dollars more than unsealed caskets, reports FCA’s Slocum. “It actually costs the casket manufacturers only about $12.00.”

But the idea that a casket can protect or preserve the body is “absolute rubbish.” Sealer vaults likewise offer no advantage except to the income of the funeral director, he says.

6. A funeral provider may not refuse or charge a fee to handle a casket you bought elsewhere.

The casket is the single most expensive item in a traditional funeral. In a 1996 survey, the AARP found the average price of a casket to be $1,658.

Traditionally, caskets were sold only by funeral homes, but today cemeteries and retailers sell caskets. You can even purchase one on the Internet. You can also use a family built one if you choose. Caskets are available in many styles and prices and can be made from metal, wood, fiberglass or plastic.

According to the federal “Funeral Rule,” it is illegal for a funeral home to charge a “handling fee” if you wish to bring in your own casket from an outside source.

7. You don’t need to spend more than $400 to $600 for a modest casket.

Since a casket is one of the largest expenses of a funeral, reduce your expenses by shopping around.

If a funeral home is charging more than $400 to $600, you can bet there’s a 300 to 500 percent markup, says Slocum. A casket that is listed at $1,295 at the funeral home might wholesale for $325. That same casket is probably available from a casket retailer for $650.

To discourage customers from choosing less expensive caskets, low-end merchandise is often ordered in ugly colors by funeral homes or is stored in an out of the way place, he says. If the price and basic design of a modest casket appeal to you, ask what other colors can be ordered. Usually a funeral home can get a more attractive replacement within hours.

8. You do not have to buy the whole bundle of services.

Many funeral providers offer various “packages” of commonly selected goods and services that make up a funeral.

“Consumers have the right to pick and choose which services they want without buying a whole package,” stresses Mack.

“You can tell the funeral director, ‘I want the first three but not the last two.’ In the past there was no way to unbundle the services, and consumers got soaked because they didn’t know any better,” she says.

9. You can plan and carry out many things on your own to honor your loved one without paying for services from a funeral home.

Having a memorial service at home, your church, a park or the community center is one way to save money, suggests Diana Evans. You could print memorial cards on your home computer, decorate the room with pictures or items suggestive of your loved one, like fishing poles or needlepoint, and have friends and family tell stories about your loved one.

“It not only saves you money, it’s more personal,” she says.

10. Local funeral and memorial societies can help consumers find ethical establishments and often negotiate discounts for their members.

The Funeral Consumers Alliance has 115 chapters in 46 states around the country. They used to be called funeral and memorial societies. These groups are run by volunteers and will have information on local funeral homes as well as price surveys that can assist the consumer in comparison-shopping for services.

The more active groups have also negotiated discounts with local funeral homes. To find a group in your area, check out this link to the directory of consumer groups across the nation.

09/17/2018

10 things you need to do when your spouse dies

By Sheryl Smolkin

When you’re newly widowed, you need to think clearly and make good decisions in the midst of your grief. This checklist can help you get through it.


Whether it’s a sudden loss or the result of a long illness, the death of your spouse is emotionally devastating and you will need time to grieve. However, many important decisions with financial implications must be made sooner, rather than later. For example, the funeral must be arranged, bills must be paid and the estate must be settled. It’s usual for you to be your spouse’s executor, unless you are too frail or otherwise physically incapable of these tasks.
This is a time when close family members or friends and trusted advisors can often do a lot of the leg-work. But ultimately you as the widow or widower must direct these people and make crucial final decisions.
Here are 10 practical things you need to do when your spouse dies:

1. Make funeral arrangements

Did your spouse purchase a cemetery plot or make other pre-arrangements? If not, you will need to select a funeral home. In either case, you will need to meet with the funeral director. Be sure to obtain multiple copies of the death certificate from the funeral home. (You can read about different funeral options and their approximate costs at Canadian Funerals Online.)

2. Assemble your team

You may need a lawyer, an accountant and a financial advisor to settle your spouse’s affairs. If you already have a satisfactory working relationship with one or more of these professionals, they are the logical choice. Otherwise, ask family and friends for personal recommendations. Professional associations such as the Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada, the Law Society of Ontario and the Financial Advisors Association of Canada (Advocis)can also assist you.

3. Apply for government benefits

The Canada Pension Plan (CPP) or Quebec Pension Plan (QPP) pays a lump-sum death benefit and you may be eligible for survivor benefits and children’s benefits as well. You may also qualify for the Widowed Spouse’s Allowance, a benefit available to the spouses or common-law partners of Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS) recipients from ages 60-64. If your spouse was a veteran, other benefits or allowances may be payable. Be sure to officially notify CPP/QPP and Old Age Security of your spouse’s death, so neither makes any overpayments that will need to be repaid later.

4. Contact current and past employers

If your spouse was employed at the time of death, you may be eligible for group life or accident insurance benefits, depending on the cause of death. In addition, there may be retiree life insurance in force. You may also be entitled to a lump sum or monthly payment from the company pension plan or other savings plans. Contact previous employers if you think there could be accrued pensions that were never paid out.

5. File life insurance claims

Gather information about any life insurance policies and, if you are the beneficiary, contact the life insurance companies to make a claim. They will request a copy of the death certificate and other documentation to validate your claim. Proceeds are usually disbursed within 30 days after all requested materials have been received.

6. Contact banks, credit unions, etc.

You will continue to have access to joint bank accounts. Any account in your spouse’s name alone typically will not be accessible to the executor (who may be you, as noted above) until the will is probated. However, if there was money in your spouse’s account, the bank will likely advance funds to pay for the funeral if you present a bill.

7. Close other accounts

To help prevent fraud, provincial health insurance coverage must be cancelled. Turn in your spouse’s driver’s licence to the closest Ministry of Transportation Office along with a copy of the death certificate. Close credit card and other charge accounts, and take your spouse’s name off joint cards and accounts. Contact appropriate government offices regarding your spouse’s social insurance card and passport.

8. Revise wills and powers of attorney

Review your will and power of attorney. If changes are necessary, have your lawyer prepare new documents for your signature.

9. Review your real estate

If you and your spouse owned your home jointly, you will retain full ownership and the value of the property will not form part of the estate for probate purposes. However, ask your lawyer whether you need to transfer it into your name as sole owner. If you want or need to downsize, don’t rush. Try to delay this decision until you are emotionally and physically ready.

10. Preserve your assets

If your spouse dies, you may become a target for fraud artists less interested in your well being than your money. Ask for time to think over any financial proposals and discuss them with your advisors. And when you are ready for romance again, consider having your lawyer draw up a pre-nuptial agreement that will protect you and your heirs, before you take the plunge and remarry.

Take the first step toward financial security

www.flintcasketsandmemorials.org

Address

Flint, MI
48505

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