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New Yellowstone National Cemetery

veterans administration logo bannerSedona AZ (May 26, 2014)The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) received a donation of property in Yellowstone County, Montana, for the new Yellowstone National Cemetery, which will be dedicated in a Memorial Day Ceremony today.

“We are pleased to expand burial service to Veterans and their families in Montana,” said Secretary of Veterans Affairs Eric K. Shinseki. “Yellowstone National Cemetery will help us reach Veterans in the rural parts of Montana who have not previously had reasonable access to a national or State Veterans Cemetery.”

VA’s National Cemetery Administration will begin burial operations at Yellowstone National Cemetery on May 26, 2014. Effective May 26, Veterans and family members who wish to schedule an interment or inurnment at the cemetery should call the National Cemetery Scheduling Office at 800-535-1117. VA will manage committal services for burials that were previously scheduled by the City of Laurel, Montana.

The property, formerly known as “Yellowstone County Veterans Cemetery,” is 10.64 acres and located at 55 Buffalo Trail Road, City of Laurel, Montana. The property was donated by Yellowstone County on May 23, 2014.

This new national cemetery is part of VA’s Rural Initiative and will serve an estimated Veteran population of 17,567 within a 75-mile radius of their homes. There are three VA-funded state Veterans cemeteries in Montana located in Helena, Miles City, and Missoula. There is one non-VA funded state cemetery in Columbia Falls.

VA’s Rural Initiative is aimed at providing burial access for Veterans not currently served by a burial option at either a VA-funded State cemetery or national cemetery. Other burial grounds are planned to serve Veterans in North Dakota, Wisconsin, Wyoming, Utah, Maine, Idaho and Nevada.

Veterans with a qualifying discharge, their spouses and eligible dependent children may be buried in a VA national cemetery. Also eligible are military personnel who die on active duty, their spouses and eligible dependents. Burial benefits are available for all eligible Veterans, regardless of whether they are buried in a national cemetery or a private cemetery, include a burial flag, a Presidential Memorial Certificate and a government headstone or marker.

In the midst of the largest expansion since the Civil War, VA operates 131 national cemeteries, and 33 soldiers’ lots and monument sites in 40 states and Puerto Rico. Yellowstone National Cemetery is the first of 8 new national Veterans burial grounds authorized by Congress. More than 4 million Americans, including Veterans of every war and conflict, are buried in VA’s national cemeteries.

Information on VA burial benefits can be obtained from national cemetery offices, from the Internet at www.cem.va.gov or by calling VA regional offices toll-free at 800-827-1000. To make burial arrangements at any VA national cemetery at the time of need, call the National Cemetery Scheduling Office at 800-535-1117.

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1 Comment

  1. The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has purchased land in New York for a new national cemetery in the Buffalo – Rochester area of Western New York.

    VA plans to construct the cemetery in Pembroke, N.Y., on a 132-acre property located at 1232 Indian Falls Road. The property has access off Exit #48A from the I-90 NY Thruway. The facility will serve more than 96,000 Veterans and family members within a 75-mile radius of the property. The closest national cemetery is Bath National Cemetery in Bath, N.Y., about 86 miles away.

    “We are pleased to expand access to burial service to Veterans and their families in New York State,” said Steve L. Muro, Under Secretary for Memorial Affairs. “Acquiring the land is a key step forward in the process.”

    VA completed the land purchase on May 30, 2014, for $625,000. The property consists of unimproved farmland and undeveloped vacant and wooded land.

    VA anticipates awarding a contract to begin the 24-month cemetery master planning and design period later this year. A construction contract will be awarded after the design phase is completed and VA receives construction funds.

    National cemetery construction projects typically require 24-30 months to complete, with early-use burial areas made available approximately 12 months after the start of construction work.

    The first full phase of construction will include the development of cemetery roads, an entrance, administration and public information center, committal shelters and a maintenance facility. This infrastructure will support approximately the first 10 years of burial capacity for casket gravesites, cremation sites and columbarium niches.

    This will be the sixth VA national cemetery in New York. The other five are Bath, Woodlawn, Gerald B. Solomon Saratoga, Calverton and Long Island. There are no state Veterans Cemeteries in New York.

    Information on VA burial benefits can be obtained from national cemetery offices, from the Internet at http://www.cem.va.gov, or by calling VA regional offices toll-free at 800-827-1000. To make burial arrangements at any VA national cemetery at the time of need, call the National Cemetery Scheduling Office at 800-535-1117.

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