Rationales
Question 1: According to OSHA, this is not required of a funeral home
establishment? Answer: Restroom for the disabled
Rationale: While ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) requires accessible
restrooms in public accommodations, OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health
Administration) focuses on employee workplace safety, not public accessibility.
OSHA requirements for funeral homes include: bloodborne pathogen controls,
hazard communication, PPE, formaldehyde exposure limits, and general
workplace safety. Accessible restrooms fall under ADA/building codes, not
OSHA regulations. This distinction is important - OSHA = worker safety, ADA =
public access. Memory trick: OSHA protects WORKERS (not public accessibility
requirements).
Question 2: According to FTC regulations, which statement is true regarding the
FD and the statement of goods and services? Answer: The FD must itemize all costs
Rationale: The Federal Trade Commission's Funeral Rule (1984) requires
funeral homes to provide itemized price lists (General Price List - GPL) showing
individual costs for services and merchandise. Itemization prevents bundling
prices to hide costs and allows consumers to make informed choices. Must
include: professional services, facilities, transportation, merchandise, cash
advances. Package pricing is allowed BUT itemized GPL must still be provided.
Violations result in FTC enforcement actions and fines. Consumer protection is
the goal. Memory trick: FTC = Fair, Transparent Costs (itemize everything for
consumer protection).
Question 3: An acolyte who leads the Catholic funeral procession Answer: Crucifer
Rationale: The crucifer is a specific liturgical role in Catholic (and other
Christian) funeral services - the person who carries the processional cross
(crucifix) leading the procession into and out of the church. Understanding
religious funeral customs is essential for proper service coordination. Other
Catholic funeral roles: thurifer (carries incense), pallbearers, priest/deacon.
Knowing terminology shows respect and professionalism. Proper execution of
religious customs honors the deceased and family. Memory trick: CRUCifer
carries the CRUCifix (cross bearer leads procession).
,Question 4: Advertisements for a funeral home are not required to
include: Answer: Total cost for minimal adult service
Rationale: FTC Funeral Rule regulates funeral home advertising but does NOT
require advertised prices to include total package costs. Advertisements must:
(1) Not be deceptive, (2) Clearly indicate if prices are for specific items only, (3)
Direct consumers to contact funeral home for complete pricing. Funeral homes
CAN advertise prices but aren't required to. GPL must be provided upon request
or at arrangement conference. Advertising flexibility allows competitive
marketing while ensuring consumers get complete information before
purchasing. Memory trick: Ads = Allowed but not obligated to show total costs
(FTC protects but doesn't require price advertising).
Question 5: After a veteran's funeral, which of the following is entitled to a US
Flag? Answer: A minor child whose application was signed by a guardian
Rationale: VA provides burial flags to honor veterans' military service. Flag
eligibility priority: (1) Veteran (for burial), (2) Next of kin after burial (spouse,
children, parents, siblings in that order). Minor children receive flag through
guardian application. Each veteran receives ONE flag. Flag is presentation flag
(not casket flag) given to family. Application made to funeral director who
orders from VA or US Post Office. Flag represents nation's gratitude. Must be
folded properly and presented ceremonially. Memory trick: One flag per veteran
= goes to family (guardian can apply for minor child).
Question 6: All funds paid for a preneed contract may be deposited in which of
the following: Answer: State bank located in WV
Rationale: West Virginia law requires preneed funeral funds be deposited in
state-regulated financial institutions to ensure consumer protection and
regulatory oversight. State bank in WV provides: (1) WV jurisdiction for
enforcement, (2) State banking regulations apply, (3) Easier auditing by WV
Board, (4) FDIC insurance protection, (5) Accessibility for inspections. Out-of-
state banks may complicate regulation and consumer protection. Alternative:
trust companies also acceptable if WV-regulated. Protects consumer funds from
misappropriation. Memory trick: Preneed funds stay IN-state (WV bank = WV
oversight and protection).
Question 7: All of the following are professional services except for: Answer: Grief
counseling
,Rationale: Professional services (listed on GPL) are services provided by funeral
home staff as part of basic services: arrangement conference, coordination with
cemetery/crematory, permits, death certificates, sheltering remains, etc. Grief
counseling is typically an ANCILLARY or REFERRAL service, not a core
professional service included in basic services fee. While funeral directors
provide emotional support, formal grief counseling by licensed therapists is
separate. FTC requires separating professional services (funeral directing) from
optional services (counseling, flowers, clergy honorarium). Memory trick:
Professional services = FD duties; Grief counseling = specialist referral (not
basic FD service).
Question 8: All of the following are mandatory in WV to sell preneed contracts
except: Answer: Successful completion of a written exam
Rationale: West Virginia preneed seller requirements include: Certificate of
Authority from Attorney General's office, insurance/bonding, proper contracts,
reporting, record-keeping. However, a specific preneed exam is NOT mandatory
(though general funeral director licensing requires exams). This distinguishes
preneed selling from funeral directing licensure. Some states require preneed-
specific exams, but WV's requirements focus on registration, financial security,
and regulatory compliance rather than testing. Ensures consumer protection
through oversight, not testing. Memory trick: Preneed selling = registration +
reporting (no separate exam required in WV).
Question 9: Annual renewal fees for a certificate of authority are payable to
the: Answer: Attorney General's Office
Rationale: West Virginia Attorney General's office regulates preneed funeral
contracts (consumer protection function). Certificate of Authority allows selling
preneed contracts. Annual renewal includes: fee payment, updated records,
compliance verification. This is SEPARATE from funeral director licensing
(Board of Funeral Service Examiners regulates FD licenses). Understanding
regulatory jurisdiction is critical: AG = preneed contracts (consumer financial
protection), Board = FD licenses (professional practice). Different offices,
different purposes. Memory trick: AG = Attorney General governs preneed
(consumer money protection).
Question 10: An application for a FD license must own at least what percentage
of an establishment or proposed funeral service business? Answer: 0%
, Rationale: West Virginia does NOT require funeral directors to have ownership
interest in a funeral establishment to be licensed. You can be a licensed FD
working as an employee without owning any portion of the business. However,
the ESTABLISHMENT license requires either: an owner with licensee in charge,
or licensed operator. This separates individual FD licensure from business
ownership. Many FDs work for corporate-owned funeral homes. Ownership and
licensure are independent. Memory trick: 0% ownership required for FD license
(can work as employee without owning business).
Question 11: Application for a US flag for burial can be made to: Answer: US Post
Master
Rationale: Veterans' burial flags can be obtained from two sources: (1) U.S. Post
Office (Post Master), (2) VA office. Funeral directors typically order flags
through local Post Office using VA Form 27-2008 (Application for United States
Flag for Burial Purposes). Post Office stocks flags specifically for this purpose.
Free service honoring veterans. Must provide proof of veteran status (DD-214 or
discharge papers). Flag must be new, properly folded, presented with dignity.
Post Office method is faster than going through VA directly. Memory trick: Post
Master provides flag FAST (local source for veteran burial flags).
Question 12: An authorized representative must carry out the decedent's wishes
if: Answer: The decedent provides financial resources that cover the cost
Rationale: Authorized representatives (next of kin with legal authority) must
honor the decedent's expressed wishes when: (1) Decedent left instructions
(written or verbal), (2) Financial resources available to cover costs. Without
funding, representative can't be obligated to pay for wishes beyond their means.
This balances respecting decedent's autonomy with practical financial reality. If
preneed contract or insurance exists covering wishes, representative must
honor them. If no resources exist, representative makes decisions within
affordable means. Memory trick: Wishes + Wallet = must honor (money makes
wishes obligations).
Question 13: Because the right of duty disposal does not constitute an obligation
to pay, the primary responsibility for the payment of the funeral expenses falls
on: Answer: The contract signor
Rationale: Critical legal distinction: Right to control disposition ≠ obligation to
pay. The person with legal authority to make arrangements (next of kin) may not