In New York City, there's a little-known island where as many as a million people are buried. It's a public cemetery for homeless people, stillborn babies and unclaimed remains. Visiting Hart Island is a challenge — even for families of the deceased, and now, some of those families are trying to change that.

The only way relatives of the deceased can visit the graves on Hart Island is by ferry across the Long Island Sound once a month. They can also travel to the island with the general public one other day each month, but to an area away from the gravesites.

New York City's Department of Correction is in charge of the operation. Four days a week, it sends a bus with prisoners to bury pine caskets that arrive on a refrigerated truck from the city morgue.

"You can see sort of large piles of dirt to the left of those little houses," says Melinda Hunt, an activist with The Hart Island Project. Hunt first visited the island as an artist for a photography project. Now, more than two decades later, she's pushing for the cemetery to be more open to the public.

"That's the area where they're actually burying people right now. Each of those people has someone who's related to them, so it's an important day for those families," she says.

For MJ Adams, her important day was in 1995. That's when she agreed to have her stillborn son, Juan Carlos, buried by the city.

"At the time, we didn't have any money, and I just thought a burial would be thousands of dollars. And it was a tough decision, but I thought if my baby could be in a place where there were other babies," Adams says. "And then I just assumed that I would be able to visit my baby."

It would be almost two decades later before she could make that visit.

For years, Adams says neither the hospital nor the city could tell her where Juan Carlos was buried. He was listed under the wrong name in the city's handwritten burial records.

But Hunt helped Adams track down the burial permit and set up a special visit in 2014.

Adams says it brought her some closure, but the visit was not ideal.

"It's kind of depressing to kind of wait by a gate where there's signs and 'No Trespassing,' " she says. "And it kind of makes you feel like you're a criminal."

Until last year, regular visits to gravesites by family members were not allowed. The city cited security concerns. But following a class-action lawsuit to open the island more, the city agreed to monthly visits by families on a trial basis. They're escorted by correction officers. Cameras and phones are not allowed.

Adams and other relatives of the deceased still want more. They want the island to become a public park, an idea that some city officials oppose.

"New York City Parks believes that the operation of a public cemetery falls well outside the agency expertise and available resources," Matt Drury, director of government relations for the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation, said at a recent city council hearing.

The Department of Correction declined NPR's interview request, but in a statement, it called administering Hart Island a "solemn responsibility."

Hunt, meanwhile, has been requesting regular copies of the city's burial records. Some have been lost to fire.

Hunt and her volunteers enter them into a digital database for families hoping to find the graves of their loved ones. They call and email her regularly.

Patricia Hunter recently contacted Hunt in search of the grave of her brother, who was stillborn at a hospital in Queens, N.Y., in 1963. Hunt says records for that year are lost.

"There's no way for you and your family to find an actual gravesite," Hunt told Hunter over the telephone.

"But, but at least we know he's there," Hunter replied with a crack in her voice.

Hunter will have to wait at least a month before she can visit any graves on Hart Island. The next opening for families is not until early March.

Copyright 2016 NPR. To see more, visit NPR.

Transcript

KELLY MCEVERS, HOST:

In New York City, there is an island that not many people know about where as many as a million people are buried. It's a public cemetery for homeless people, stillborn babies and unclaimed remains, and visiting the island is not easy, even for families of the deceased. As NPR's Hansi Lo Wang reports, some of those families are trying to change that.

HANSI LO WANG, BYLINE: The only way relatives of the deceased can visit the graves on Hart Island is by ferry across the Long Island Sound once a month. They can also travel to the island with the general public one other day each month but to an area away from the gravesites. Or you can go to a nearby island where Melinda Hunt and I are standing.

You couldn't get any closer than this, behind this chain-link fence.

MELINDA HUNT: Right, not without permission from the Department of Correction.

WANG: Melinda Hunt is an activist with a Hart Island Project. She first visited the island as an artist for a photography project. Now, more than two decades later, she's pushing for the cemetery to be more open to public. A refrigerated truck arrives at the gate from the city morgue. It's carrying the remains of 14 people to be taken over to Hart Island. New York City's Department of Corrections is in charge of the operation. They've sent a bus with prisoners to bury those remains. We watch them ferry over to the island.

HUNT: You can see sort of large piles of dirt to the left of those little houses

WANG: Yeah, I see some of that.

HUNT: And that's the area where they're actually burying people right now.

WANG: For MJ Adams, her important day was in 1995. That's when she agreed to have her stillborn son, Juan Carlos, buried by the city.

MJ ADAMS: At the time, we didn't have any money, and I just thought a burial would be thousands of dollars. And it was a tough decision, but I thought if my baby could be in a place where there were other babies - and then I just assumed that I would be able to visit my baby.

WANG: It would be almost two decades later before she could make that visit. For years, Adams says neither the hospital nor the city could tell her where Juan Carlos was buried. He was listed under the wrong name in the city's handwritten burial records. But Melinda Hunt helped Adams track down the burial permit and set up a special visit in 2014. Adams says it brough her some closure, but the visit was not ideal.

ADAMS: It's kind of depressing to kind of wait by a gate where there's, you know, signs and no trespassing, and it kind of makes you feel like you're a criminal.

WANG: Until last year, regular visits to gravesites by family members were not allowed. The city cited security concerns, but following a class-action lawsuit to open the island more, the city agreed on a trial basis to monthly visits by families. They're escorted by correction officers. Cameras and phones are not allowed. Adams and other families still want more. They want the island to become a public park, an idea that some city officials oppose.

(SOUNDBITE OF ARCHIVED RECORDING)

MATT DRURY: New York City Parks believes that the operation of a public cemetery falls well outside the agency expertise and available resources.

WANG: That was Matt Drury of the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation speaking at a recent city council hearing. The Department of Correction declined NPR's interview request, but in a statement, it called administering Hart Island a solemn responsibility. Melinda Hunt, meanwhile, has been requesting regular copies of the city's burial records. Some have been lost to fire. Hunt and her volunteers enter them into a digital database for families hoping to find the graves of their loved ones. They call and email her regularly.

HUNT: What year did he die?

PATRICIA HUNTER: He was stillborn in 1963.

WANG: That's Hunt on the phone with Patricia Hunter who's looking for her brother. Hunt says records for the year he died are lost.

HUNT: There's no way for you and your family to find an actual gravesite.

HUNTER: But at least we know he's there.

HUNT: Exact.

HUNTER: He's on Hart Island if he was born in Queens.

HUNT: Yes, absolutely.

HUNTER: All right.

HUNT: He definitely was buried there.

HUNTER: You really helped me. Thank you. I'm going to cry. Thank you so much. You really...

WANG: Hunter will have to wait at least a month before she can visit any graves on Hart Island. The next opening for families is not until early March. Hansi Lo Wang, NPR News, New York. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.

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