Help us bring Natural Organic Reduction
to Michigan

Sign our petition to help legalize NOR in Michigan.

About NOR 4 Michigan

NOR4Michigan is a group of volunteers that have come together to work with the funeral home industry and the Michigan Legislature to give us, our families, and our loved ones the option to have Natural Organic Reduction (NOR) as a means of final disposition after death. While we each have our own unique perspectives and desires for wanting the option of NOR, we all want the option.
Will you please sign our petition to the Michigan Legislature asking them to make the option of NOR legal in Michigan?

https://www.Change.org/NOR4Michigan

When you click the link, you will be directed to our page on the Change.org website. Change.org asks that you support them financially. The volunteers at NOR4Michigan support Change.org with a monthly donation, therefore, you may support them if you so choose, however we already do that. They are a worthy organization. NOR4Michigan is funded by our volunteer board. While we are asking that you give support to our cause and that you spread the word, we are not asking for financial support.

How can I help?

You can help us bring NOR to Michigan by joining our cause and signing the petition, which will be presented to our Michigan legislators.

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What is NOR?

Natural Organic Reduction (NOR), also known as human composting, soil transformation, and Terramation, is a process that harnesses modern technology to expedite the human body’s natural process of decomposition. 

Like all organic beings, human bodies naturally decompose after death unless they are cremated or embalmed.  While this can normally take a long time, during NOR, decomposition takes as little as 1-2 months. The process entails placing a deceased human body in a specially designed capsule along with wood chips, straw, alfalfa, and other readily available biodegradable materials, allowing microbes found in the body and plants to carry out the natural decomposition process.  

The capsule is insulated so it naturally remains in a specific temperature range and it is given a steady supply of oxygen to create an ideal environment.  The end result is a nutrient-rich compost which can be used by loved ones to grow new plants, donated to nature preserves or conservation efforts, or however they see fit.

Families around the country who have chosen NOR have found it to be a profound and meaningful experience, where the natural process of death can be allowed to do what it has always done: cultivate new life.  

While modern burial practices have tended to favor in-ground burial and cremation, allowing the body to decompose naturally has been common around the world for thousands of years, long before the more modern embalming process gained favor in the 19th Century. In more recent years, cultural concerns like sustainability and environmentally friendly burial have led to a resurgence in interest in direct composting of human mortalities.  

NOR is far more environmentally friendly than either cremation or embalming, producing significantly less carbon emissions and using no harmful chemicals.  At a time when climate change is an ever-growing concern, many people support the possibility of our last act helping to nourish the planet.  NOR is currently legal in fourteen states, with legislation introduced in fourteen more.  It’s clear that many people around the country want this option, and our goal is to give Michiganders that choice for themselves and their families.

Sign Our Petition

Help us bring NOR to Michigan

Michigan Legislation

We have received the 2025-2026 Legislative Guide from Michigan Information & Research Service Inc. (MIRS). The guide contains:

  • Complete legislator profiles and biographies
  • Committee assignments
  • Direct contact information for lawmakers and staff
  • Expert insider details you won’t find anywhere else
  • Essential term limit tables and chamber seating charts

If you’d like to order your own guide from MIRS, click this link!
https://store.mirs.news/products/fd5f84e36c/3078540000005883130

What’s next for NOR legislation in Michigan?

Legislation to allow Natural Organic Reduction has not yet been introduced in Michigan. When it is, you will find links here to the House and Senate Bills. Once signed into law you will find a link here to the signed legislation as well as updates on implementation by the Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (LARA).

Phone

(616) 914-2184