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The driver/bearer or chauffeur
is the manual worker of any funeral company.
They usually perform all
the heavy and more physical aspects of the job and will form the bearer
party on any funeral.
In the background they will
make up coffins, dress and assist with the preparation of the deceased for
presentation and attend hospitals, private homes and public places to
recover bodies.
If full-time employees,
they will also usually be available for 24 hour call out duty when they
will normally work alongside one of the funeral directors as part of a
team.
The driver/bearer may well aspire to becoming a
funeral director one day and many companies will provide on the job
training as well as entry to diploma courses or the newer NVQ and
BTEC courses.
They will collect and
deliver paper work, goods and deceased persons and may be required to
travel long distances in the course of their various duties.
They are responsible for
the proper presentation of their own vehicle and can, on occasion, perform
some of the basic functions of the funeral director during a funeral.
When the work load permits
(usually between funerals) they will often have to deliver flowers to
private homes, hospitals or cemeteries.
They will need a good basic
knowledge of their area and must be a safe and competent driver.
Physical fitness is a must!
These people are sometimes driving on several funerals in one day,
following a busy night of call outs and facing more of the same until the
end of their stint on duty.
All staff are answerable to
their funeral director when acting for them on any particular funeral.
Employment can be sought by
writing directly to any of the funeral homes to be found in the local
telephone directories. Be aware that writing to all the offices listed
will inevitably result in some duplication where the firms are actually
sub branches of the same company.
If you're giving
consideration to joining the funeral service as a driver/bearer, spare a
moment to think of the distances involved - hurtling through the night to
respond to a Police removal can lose it's novelty rapidly after the third
call in one shift and nobody likes to be kept waiting.......
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