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The Federal Trade Commission
enforces a variety of federal antitrust and consumer protection
laws. The Commission seeks to ensure that the nation's markets function
competitively, and are vigorous, efficient, and free of undue restrictions.
The Commission also
works to enhance the smooth operation of the marketplace by eliminating
acts or practices that are unfair or deceptive. In general, the
Commission's efforts are directed toward stopping actions that threaten
consumers' opportunities to exercise informed choice. Finally, the
Commission undertakes economic analysis to support its law enforcement
efforts and to contribute to the policy deliberations of the Congress,
the Executive Branch, other independent agencies, and state and
local governments when requested. In addition to carrying out its
statutory enforcement responsibilities, the Commission advances
the policies underlying Congressional mandates through cost-effective
non-enforcement activities, such as consumer education.
How the FTC brings
about action
The FTC may begin
an investigation in different ways. Letters from consumers or businesses,
Congressional inquiries, or articles on consumer or economic subjects
may trigger FTC action. Investigations are either public or nonpublic.
Generally, FTC investigations are nonpublic in order to protect
both the investigation and the company.
If the FTC believes
a violation of the law occurred, it may attempt to obtain voluntary
compliance by entering into a consent order with the company. A
company that signs a consent order need not admit that it violated
the law, but it must agree to stop the disputed practices outlined
in an accompanying complaint. If a consent agreement cannot be reached,
the FTC may issue an administrative complaint.
If an administrative
complaint is issued, a formal proceeding that is much like a court
trial begins before an administrative law judge: evidence is submitted,
testimony is heard, and witnesses are examined and cross-examined.If
a law violation is found, a cease and desist order or other appropriate
relief may be issued. Initial decisions by administrative law judges
may be appealed to the full Commisson.
Final decisions issued
by the Commission may be appealed to the U.S. Court of Appeals and,
ultimately, to the U.S. Supreme Court. If the Commission's position
is upheld, the FTC, in certain circumstances, may then seek consumer
redress in court. If the company ever violates the order, the Commission
also may seek civil penalties or an injunction.
In some circumstances,
the FTC can go directly to court to obtain an injunction, civil
penalties, or consumer redress. This usually happens in cases of
ongoing consumer fraud. By going directly to court, the FTC can
stop the fraud before too many consumers are injured. The Commission
can also issue Trade Regulation Rules. If the FTC staff finds evidence
of unfair or deceptive practices in an entire industry, it can recommend
that the Commission begin a rulemaking proceeding. Throughout the
rulemaking proceeding, the public will have opportunities to attend
hearings and file written comments. The Commission will consider
these comments along with the entire rulemaking record--the hearing
testimony, the staff reports, and the Presiding Officer's report
-- before making a final decision on the proposed rule. An FTC rule
may be challenged in any of the U.S. Courts of Appeal. When issued,
these rules have the force of law.
Antitrust and competition matters include:
General inquiries and complaints
Questions about pending FTC cases
Anticompetitive practices
Boycotts
Monopolization
Price discrimination
Price fixing
Trade associations
Antitrust Enforcement in the Funeral Industry
The Commission is concerned about activities in the funeral industry
that may lessen competition and result in noncompetitive prices
or lower quality of services for consumers. Conduct or transactions
that raise antitrust concerns are anticompetitive agreements among
competitors, attempts to monopolize a market, and mergers and acquisitions
that threaten a substantial lessening of competition. The Commission's
staff is constantly on the look-out for such activities, and they
work closely with state attorneys general in their monitoring and
enforcement efforts.
In recent years, the principal antitrust enforcement efforts in
the funeral industry have involved potentially anticompetitive mergers
and acquisitions. These cases generally are resolved through consent
orders that require the acquiring firm to divest one or more acquired
properties in order to prevent a lessening of competition. In 1999,
for example, the FTC secured a consent decree with Service Corporation
International (SCI), the largest owner of funeral homes and cemeteries
in the world, to divest funeral service and cemetery properties
in 14 local geographic markets in connection with its acquisition
of Equity Corporation International, the fourth largest funeral
home and cemetery company in the United States.(3) The complaint
alleged that the acquisition would raise significant competitive
concerns in six local markets for funeral services, with total annual
sales of approximately $36.6 million for funeral services, and in
eight local markets for cemetery services, with total annual sales
of approximately $47.3 million.
An important aspect of the antitrust analysis of mergers in this
industry is that the markets for funeral and cemetery services are
very localized. This means that, from an antitrust perspective,
a merger or acquisition raises antitrust concerns only to the extent
that the transaction will reduce the number of firms in a particular
geographic area to such a level that the remaining firm or firms
could raise prices or otherwise adversely affect consumers. An acquisition
that involves funeral homes or cemeteries in many cities may raise
antitrust concerns in only a few, or in none. Even when relatively
few firms remain, competition will not necessarily be lessened,
because other factors, such as the potential for new firms to enter
the market, may keep the market competitive. The Commission remains
vigilant for the relatively few transactions that raise serious
concerns.
Consumer Protection Enforcement in the Funeral Industry
The Funeral Rule
The Funeral Rule was adopted by the Commission in 1982 and became
fully effective in 1984. It has the force and effect of law, and
it may be enforced through civil penalty actions in the federal
courts. The FTC Act authorizes courts to impose civil penalties
of not more than $11,000 per violation for failure to comply. The
Rule covers funeral providers -- that is, industry members that
sell both funeral goods and funeral services to the public.(4) Although
most funeral providers are funeral homes, other businesses, such
as cemeteries and crematories, can also be "funeral providers" within
the coverage of the Rule if they market both funeral goods and services.
Furthermore, the Rule's requirements apply to both pre-need and
at-need funeral arrangements; in pre-need situations, funeral providers
must comply with all Rule requirements at the time funeral arrangements
are pre-planned.(5)
The Rule requires funeral providers to furnish consumers with three
basic types of information, which, taken together, enable consumers
to select the goods and services they want and to comparison shop
for them.
First, the Rule ensures that consumers receive itemized price information
for the various goods and services that make up a funeral. If a
consumer inquires about price over the telephone, funeral providers
must give accurate price and other reasonable information about
the goods and services they offer. If a consumer visits a funeral
home in person, the Rule requires that the funeral director provide
the consumer with a general price list that itemizes prices of each
of the funeral goods and services offered by the funeral home. The
Rule also requires funeral providers to show consumers a casket
price list and an outer burial container price list, if the home's
offerings of those items are not itemized on the general price list.
At the beginning of any discussion of funeral arrangements, funeral
directors must provide a copy of the general price list for the
consumer to keep, and must show the casket price list and outer
burial container price list before showing the consumer those items.
These requirements apply for both at-need and pre-need situations
when funeral arrangements are being made.
The second type of information the Rule requires is a disclosure
on the general price list that a consumer may choose only the items
he or she desires. Thus, the Rule empowers consumers with the knowledge
that they can pick and choose what they want to buy from the itemized
general price list. Consumers do not have to purchase a package
funeral at a pre-determined price that may include items or services
that the consumer does not want but must pay for in order to get
the other items in the package. To ensure that consumers' choices
are honored by the funeral director, once funeral arrangements are
made, funeral directors must give consumers an itemized statement
of goods and services selected, listing each good or service selected
along with the price for each item and the total cost of arrangements
made.
The third type of information the Rule requires concerns disclosures
of certain legal requirements and options available to the consumer.
For example, the price list must disclose that in most cases embalming
is not required by law. Similarly, the price list must disclose
that one may use alternative containers for direct cremations, rather
than incurring the much greater expense of purchasing a casket.
In addition to ensuring that consumers receive these three basic
types of information, the Rule protects consumers by prohibiting
specific practices, such as misrepresenting that embalming is legally
required or necessary (when it is not), misrepresenting that a casket
is required for direct cremation, misrepresenting that any funeral
goods or services have protective or preservative abilities when
this is not the case, embalming without consent, or requiring a
consumer to purchase any funeral good or service as a condition
of purchasing any other good or service. In sum, the information
required by the Rule seeks to enable consumers to make informed
purchasing decisions at a time of extraordinary stress.
For more information on the F.T.C. or to have a General Price
List designed for your funeral home call Robert L. Short II at 727.505.8746.
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