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Committee approves balloon amendment to HB 2331 clarifying veterans' cremated remains disposition

Senate Committee on Federal and State Affairs · January 27, 2026

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Summary

The committee approved a balloon amendment to HB 2331, added at the Kansas Office of Veterans Services' request, clarifying that counties pay final disposition expenses for unclaimed veterans under KSA 70-3304 and that organizations taking custody under the veterans paragraph are not liable for cremation costs; the amendment passed by voice vote.

The Senate Committee on Federal and State Affairs approved a balloon amendment to House Bill 2331 that clarifies how counties and certain organizations handle the disposition of cremated remains, particularly for veterans.

Committee counsel Jason Long said the amendment incorporates changes requested by the Kansas Office of Veterans Services. The change explicitly references existing statute (KSA 70-3304) to ensure counties cover final disposition expenses for unclaimed veteran bodies where applicable, and it adds language that a person or organization taking custody of cremated remains under the veterans provision shall not be liable for the cost of cremation or other applicable fees.

Senators asked several clarifying questions about the amendment, including whether the county would be responsible for costs (counsel confirmed counties may be responsible under the existing statute for veterans), readability concerns and whether the provision might be redundant given placement in the veteran-specific paragraph. Committee members also raised practical concerns about how coroners notify next of kin and whether newspaper notice remains sufficient in modern practice; counsel said the bill requires publication in a newspaper of general circulation in the county and does not mandate social media notification.

Jason Long explained coroner procedures in the bill: coroners would hold unclaimed remains for three years, publish notice in a county newspaper, and if family members claim remains during the retention period they would be required to reimburse the coroner for the costs of cremation and other applicable fees. Members expressed concern about scenarios where churches or other organizations might be offered remains and whether the bill's references to "authorized" persons are sufficiently clear; counsel said the phrase would be read in its ordinary legal sense and the committee could refine language if needed.

Senator Blue moved the amendment and Senator Thomas seconded; the committee approved the balloon amendment by voice vote. Committee leadership indicated additional amendments on the bill were expected and said they would work to clarify remaining drafting issues.

Next steps: the amendment was adopted by committee and the bill will proceed with the amended language for further consideration and potential additional amendment work.