(1) The National Cemetery Administration of the Department of Veterans Affairs (hereinafter referred to as the ‘NCA’) honors veterans with final resting places in national shrines and with lasting tributes that commemorate their service to the Nation.
(2) The NCA currently maintains more than 2,800,000 grave sites at 125 national cemeteries in 39 States and Puerto Rico.
(3) In fiscal year 2006, nearly 97,000 interments were conducted at national cemeteries.
(4) In fiscal year 2006, nearly 72 percent of interments were at the Nation’s 20 busiest national cemeteries in Riverside, California, Florida, Calverton, New York, Jefferson Barracks, Missouri, Fort Snelling, Minnesota, Fort Sam Houston, Texas, Fort Logan, Colorado, Willamette, Oregon, Dallas-Fort Worth, Texas, National Memorial Cemetery of Arizona, Houston, Texas, Fort Rosecrans, California, Abraham Lincoln, Illinois, Tahoma, Washington, Massachusetts, San Joaquin Valley, California, Long Island, New York, Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania, Ohio Western Reserve, and Great Lakes, Michigan.
(5) Section 1491 of title 10, United States Code, requires, upon a family’s request, that every eligible veteran receive a military funeral honors ceremony, to include folding and presenting the United States burial flag and the playing of Taps, and the law further stipulates that veterans’ organizations may assist in providing military funeral honors.
(6) The folding and presentation of the United States flag is a solemn and important moment for families of the deceased, and can be done in silence or accompanied by a recitation of the 13 steps taken to fold the flag and the meaning behind each step.
(7) Veterans’ service organizations across the Nation often provide funeral honors at national cemeteries, including the folding and presentation of the flag, the recitation of the flag-folding steps and the playing of Taps.
(8) The recitation of the flag-folding steps should be proactively offered to the families rather than waiting for a request.
(9) The choice to have the flag-folding ceremony read aloud should rest with the family of the deceased, not the NCA.