This is a clone of the Texas Administrative Code (TAC) for educational purposes. It is not the official version and should not be used for legal purposes. Site created Wed, 21 May 2025 21:16:42 GMT
(a) Purpose. The purpose of this section is to implement Texas Occupations Code Chapter 651, 76th Legislature, 1999, and Health and Safety Code Chapters 193 and 195. In an effort to better protect the public health, safety and welfare, it is the legislative intent of the laws of the Texas Department of State Health Services (Department) and the Texas Funeral Service Commission (TFSC) to adopt by rule a memorandum of understanding to facilitate cooperation between the agencies by establishing joint procedures and describing the actual duties of each agency for the referral, investigation, and resolution of complaints affecting the administration and enforcement of state laws relating to vital statistics and the licensing of funeral directors and funeral establishments. (b) Scope. (1) The Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) includes the respective responsibilities of the Department and the TFSC in regulating any person or entity under the Health and Safety Code Chapters 193 and 195, concerning the completion and filing of death records. (2) The Department and the TFSC will implement the cooperative procedure described in this memorandum to refer complaints to the other agency when that complaint falls within the other agency's jurisdiction or may have an effect on the administration and enforcement of the law for which the other agency is responsible. (3) The Department and the TFSC will implement the cooperative procedure described in this MOU in order to notify the other agency of violations of Health and Safety Code Chapters 193 and 195; and Texas Occupations Code Chapter 651 by funeral directors and funeral establishments, and to assist and encourage funeral directors, embalmers, and funeral establishments to conform their activities relating to the completion and filing of death records. (4) The MOU does not limit the authority of either agency, acting in its own capacity under state or federal law, to investigate complaints that fall within that agency's statutory jurisdiction. (c) Definitions. The following words and terms, when used in this section, shall have the following meanings, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. (1) Agency--Texas Department of State Health Services or the Texas Funeral Service Commission. (2) Death record--A report of death, death certificate, or a burial-transit permit, and such other forms as the Texas Department of State Health Services determine to be necessary. (3) Department--The Texas Department of State Health Services or any local registrar. (4) Funeral Director--A person who for compensation engages in or conducts, or who holds himself out as being engaged, for compensation, in preparing, other than the embalming, for the burial or disposition of dead human bodies, and maintaining or operating a funeral establishment for the preparation and disposition, or for the care of dead human bodies. (5) Funeral establishment--A place of business used in the care and preparation for burial or transportation of dead human bodies, or any other place where one or more persons, either as sole owner, in co-partnership, or through corporate status, represent themselves to be engaged in the business of embalming and/or funeral directing, or is so engaged. (6) Local registrar-- (A) The justice of the peace is a local registrar of births and deaths in a justice of the peace precinct. However, the duty of registering births and deaths may be transferred to the county clerk if the justice of the peace and the county clerk agree in writing and the agreement is ratified by the commissioners court. (B) The municipal clerk or secretary is the local registrar of births and deaths in a municipality with a population of 2,500 or more. (C) If a local registrar fails or refuses to register each birth and death in the district or neglects duties, the county judge or the mayor, as appropriate, shall appoint a new local registrar and shall send the name and mailing address of the appointee to the state registrar. (7) Person-- (A) includes corporation, organization, government, or governmental subdivision or agency, business trust, estate, trust, partnership, association, and any other legal entity; or (B) includes individual, corporation, or association where enforcement of Health and Safety Code Chapter 195 is involved. (8) Physician--Any individual licensed by the Texas Medical Board to practice medicine in this state. (d) Delegation of responsibilities. The Department and TFSC agree that the agencies shall have the following responsibilities. (1) The Department shall have primary responsibility for the enforcement of the laws, rules, and policies governing the collection and maintenance of a system of vital statistics, including the collection and maintenance of death records for the State of Texas. Except as may be otherwise provided by law, the Department shall: (A) design the format and prescribe the data to be entered on all forms that constitute the death records of the state; (B) prescribe the rules and procedures to be followed by a funeral director licensed by TFSC in executing his/her responsibility to secure the required data and file the completed death record; (C) establish rules or policies to determine when a local registrar may accept the filing of a death record by a funeral director or the funeral director's designee and the purposes for which each record may be used, including the filing and uses of a delayed death certificate; and (D) enforce the provisions of the Health & Safety Code (Code) Chapter 193, in accordance with Chapter 195 of the Code relating to criminal penalties for violations of laws relating to vital statistics. These laws include Chapters 191, 192, and 193 of the Code and rules adopted thereunder. If the state registrar knows or suspects that a funeral director or a funeral establishment has violated the provisions of §195.003 or other provisions of