SEC. 73-11-43. State board of funeral service; membership.
There is hereby created the State Board of Funeral Service which shall consist of seven
(7) members, one (1) funeral service licensee and one (1) funeral director licensee to be
appointed from each Mississippi Supreme Court district. Three (3) members shall have been
licensed for the practice of funeral service under this chapter for five (5) consecutive
years and/or have had at least five (5) consecutive years' experience as a funeral
director and embalmer in this state immediately preceding his appointment. Three (3)
members shall have been licensed for the practice of funeral directing under this chapter
for five (5) consecutive years and/or have had at least five (5) consecutive years'
experience as a funeral director immediately preceding his appointment. One (1) member
shall be a public member and be appointed from the public at large. The members of the
board shall be appointed by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate. All
appointments shall be for terms of four (4) years from the expiration date of the previous
term. No board member shall serve more than two (2) consecutive full terms. Vacancies in
office shall be filled by appointment by the Governor in the same manner as the
appointment to the position which becomes vacant, subject to the advice and consent of the
Senate at the next regular session of the Legislature. Appointments for vacancies in
office, except those from the public at large, may be made from a joint list of four (4)
qualified persons, two (2) each submitted by the Mississippi Funeral Directors Association
and the Mississippi Funeral Directors and Morticians Association. Nothing in this chapter
or any other statute shall preclude the members of the State Embalming Board from serving
as members of the State Board of Funeral Service.
SOURCES: Laws, 1983, ch. 351, Sec. 2; reenacted and amended, 1991, ch. 463, Sec. 3; 1991, ch. 591, Sec. 3; 1993, ch. 499, Sec. 2; reenacted, 1995, ch. 387, Sec. 3, eff from and after June 30, 1995