Politics & Government

Bucks County Coroner Meredith Buck Announces Re-Election Bid

Bucks County Coroner Meredith Buck took over the Warminster-based office in January 2020. She is the first woman elected as Bucks coroner.

Bucks County Coroner Meredith Buck announced her bid for re-election Tuesday.
Bucks County Coroner Meredith Buck announced her bid for re-election Tuesday. (Meredith Buck)

WARMINSTER, PA ?Bucks County Coroner Meredith Buck has announced her candidacy for re-election.

Buck, an attorney with 22 years of experience and a Registered Nurse recipient of the international Florence Nightingale Medal, formally announced her plans Tuesday to run for re-election in 2023.

The primary election is on May 16.

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?I took office in January 2020, and within six weeks the global pandemic struck.," Buck said. "My office had to quickly adapt and I was honored to help shepherd our community through this unprecedented crisis.?

Since January 2020, she has overseen the investigation of more than 6,800 death cases and the issuance of over 12,000 cremation permits.

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Buck said she and her staff streamlined operations while working closely with the various agencies, both the state and local health departments, and law enforcement, including the FBI when needed, in identifying decedents and determining the cause and manner of death of all sudden, unexplained, and violent deaths in Bucks County.

As an attorney, Buck said she understands the legalities involved in her job and knew that all COVID-19-related deaths were statutorily required to be investigated by the Coroner?s Office.

In addition to the increased caseload caused by the pandemic, Buck said she was responsible for providing guidance to all Bucks County hospitals, long-term care facilities, and funeral homes on how to handle the deaths caused by the COVID-19 outbreak.

Throughout the pandemic, she identified gaps and helped to provide Bucks County funeral directors with personal protective equipment (PPE) and get them moved up to the first vaccine phase, as they were often forgotten.

As a nurse and the first woman ever elected coroner in Bucks County, Buck said it's critical to present a softer, more compassionate side to the office in her interaction with the community, especially with grieving families, and in helping the public understand the role of the Coroner?s Office.

Buck, in her re-election statement, credited much of her success to her dedicated and hard-working staff. She and her staff have "worked diligently" to address the situation she inherited involving Bucks County?s unclaimed decedents.

Since taking office, Buck has collaborated with the community and the media to reunite many unclaimed decedents with their loved ones.

She and her staff have made it possible for many unclaimed veterans and their spouses to be properly laid to rest at Washington Crossing National Cemetery and other National Cemeteries in the Commonwealth.

Finding a proper resting place for the remaining unclaimed in Bucks County continues to be a top priority, Buck said.

As coroner, Buck said she advocates for her constituents to make certain her office receives necessary resources.

?I truly care about what we do and I am not afraid to do what it takes to get the job done,? she said.

Bucks said, despite the pandemic, that she has "honorably served and accomplished much," including streamlining and improving the operations of the Coroner?s Office through an innovative and updated case management system and increasing morgue capacity.

Buck said she's improved communications internally and with outside agencies.

?I want to continue to serve the people of Bucks County compassionately and professionally in helping to get them through what is often the worse time of their lives,? she said.

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