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Fair
Housing: Your Legal Rights
Fair
housing laws provide a critical way to deter and counteract housing
discrimination. There are many laws that provide relief for victims
of housing discrimination. Rights and remedies can be found in
federal laws, as well as laws in the state where you live.
Here's some
basic information about how the Fair Housing Act works.
What Housing
Is Covered?
The Fair Housing Act covers most housing. In some circumstances,
the Act exempts owner-occupied buildings with no more than four
units, single-family housing sold or rented without the use of
a broker, and housing operated by organizations and private clubs
that limit occupancy to members.
What Is
Prohibited?
In the Sale and Rental of Housing: No one may take any of
the following actions based on race, color, national origin, religion,
sex, familial status or handicap:
- Refuse
to rent or sell housing
- Refuse
to negotiate for housing
- Make housing
unavailable
- Deny a
dwelling
- Set different
terms, conditions or privileges for sale or rental of a dwelling
- Provide
different housing services or facilities
- Falsely
deny that housing is available for inspection, sale, or rental
- For profit,
persuade owners to sell or rent (blockbusting) or
- Deny anyone
access to or membership in a facility or service (such as a
multiple listing service) related to the sale or rental of housing.
In Mortgage
Lending: No one may take any of the following actions based
on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial status
or handicap (disability):
- Refuse
to make a mortgage loan
- Refuse
to provide information regarding loans
- Impose
different terms or conditions on a loan, such as different interest
rates, points, or fees
- Discriminate
in appraising property
- Refuse
to purchase a loan or
- Set different
terms or conditions for purchasing a loan.
In Addition:
It is illegal for anyone to:
- Threaten,
coerce, intimidate or interfere with anyone exercising a fair
housing right or assisting others who exercise that right
- Advertise
or make any statement that indicates a limitation or preference
based on race, color, national origin, religion, sex, familial
status, or handicap. This prohibition against discriminatory
advertising applies to single-family and owner-occupied housing
that is otherwise exempt from the Fair Housing Act.
Additional
Protection if You Have a Disability
If you or
someone associated with you:
- Has a physical
or mental disability (including hearing, mobility and visual
impairments, chronic alcoholism, chronic mental illness, AIDS,
AIDS Related Complex and mental retardation) that substantially
limits one or more major life activities
- Has a record
of such a disability or are regarded as having such a disability
your landlord
may not:
- Refuse
to let you make reasonable modifications to your dwelling or
common use areas, at your expense, if necessary for the disabled
person to use the housing. (Where reasonable, the landlord may
permit changes only if you agree to restore the property to
its original condition when you move.)
- Refuse
to make reasonable accommodations in rules, policies, practices
or services if necessary for the disabled person to use the
housing.
Housing
Opportunities for Families
Unless a building
or community qualifies as housing for older persons, it may not
discriminate based on familial status. That is, it may not discriminate
against families in which one or more children under 18 live with:
- A parent
- A person
who has legal custody of the child or children or
- The designee
of the parent or legal custodian, with the parent or custodian's
written permission.
Familial status
protection also applies to pregnant women and anyone securing legal
custody of a child under 18. Exemption: Housing for older persons
is exempt from the prohibition against familial status discrimination
if:
- The HUD
Secretary has determined that it is specifically designed for
and occupied by elderly persons under a Federal, State or local
government program or
- It is occupied
solely by persons who are 62 or older or
- It houses
at least one person who is 55 or older in at least 80 percent
of the occupied units, and adheres to a policy that demonstrates
an intent to house persons who are 55 or older.
A transition
period permits residents on or before September 13, 1988, to continue
living in the housing, regardless of their age, without interfering
with the exemption.
Source: http://www.hud.gov/offices/fheo/index.cfm
Other
Web Sites of Interest:
National
Fair Housing Alliance
fairhousinglaw.org
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