The Fair Housing Act
The Fair Housing Act
prohibits discrimination in housing because of:
- Race or color
- National origin
- Religion
- Sex
- Familial status
(including children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal
custodians; pregnant women and people securing custody of children
under 18)
- Handicap (Disability)
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:
- Have 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
- Have 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.
Example: A building with a
"no pets" policy must allow a visually impaired tenant to keep a
guide dog.
Example: An apartment
complex that offers tenants ample, unassigned parking must honor a request
from a mobility-impaired tenant for a reserved space near her apartment if
necessary to assure that she can have access to her apartment.
However, housing need not
be made available to a person who is a direct threat to the health or
safety of others or who currently uses illegal drugs.
Requirements for New
Buildings
In buildings that are ready
for first occupancy after March 13, 1991, and have an elevator and four or
more units:
- Public and common areas
must be accessible to persons with disabilities
- Doors and hallways must
be wide enough for wheelchairs
- All units must have:
- An accessible route
into and through the unit
- Accessible light
switches, electrical outlets, thermostats and other environmental
controls
- Reinforced bathroom
walls to allow later installation of grab bars and
- Kitchens and
bathrooms that can be used by people in wheelchairs.
If a building with four or
more units has no elevator and will be ready for first occupancy after
March 13, 1991, these standards apply to ground floor units.
These requirements for new
buildings do not replace any more stringent standards in State or local
law.
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.
If You Think Your Rights
Have Been Violated
HUD is ready to help with
any problem of housing discrimination. If you think your rights have been
violated, the Housing
Discrimination Complaint Form is available for you to download,
complete and return, or complete online and submit, or you may write HUD a
letter, or telephone the HUD
Office nearest you. You have one year after an alleged violation to
file a complaint with HUD, but you should file it as soon as possible.
What to Tell HUD:
- Your name and address
- The name and address of
the person your complaint is against (the respondent)
- The address or other
identification to the housing involved
- A short description to
the alleged violation (the event that caused you to believe your
rights were violated)
- The date(s) to the
alleged violation
Where to Write or Call:
Send the Housing
Discrimination Complaint Form or a letter to the HUD
Office nearest you or you may call that office directly.
If You Are Disabled:
HUD also provides:
- A toll-free TTY phone
for the hearing impaired: 1-800-927-9275.
- Interpreters
- Tapes and Braille materials
- Assistance in reading
and completing forms
What Happens When You File
A Complaint?
HUD will notify you when it
receives your complaint. Normally, HUD also will:
- Notify the alleged
violator of your complaint and permit that person to submit an answer
- Investigate your
complaint and determine whether there is reasonable cause to believe
the Fair Housing Act has been violated
- Notify you if it cannot
complete an investigation within 100 days of receiving your complaint
Conciliation
HUD will try to reach an
agreement with the person your complaint is against (the respondent). A
conciliation agreement must protect both you and the public interest. If
an agreement is signed, HUD will take no further action on your complaint.
However, if HUD has reasonable cause to believe that a conciliation
agreement is breached, HUD will recommend that the Attorney General file
suit.
Complaint Referrals
If HUD has determined that
your State or local agency has the same fair housing powers as HUD, HUD
will refer your complaint to that agency for investigation and notify you
of the referral. That agency must begin work on your complaint within 30
days or HUD may take it back.
What If You Need Help
Quickly?
If you need immediate help
to stop a serious problem that is being caused by a Fair Housing Act
violation, HUD may be able to assist you as soon as you file a complaint.
HUD may authorize the Attorney General to go to court to seek temporary or
preliminary relief, pending the outcome of your complaint, if:
- Irreparable harm is
likely to occur without HUD's intervention
- There is substantial
evidence that a violation of the Fair Housing Act occurred
Example: A builder agrees
to sell a house but, after learning the buyer is black, fails to keep the
agreement. The buyer files a complaint with HUD. HUD may authorize the
Attorney General to go to court to prevent a sale to any other buyer until
HUD investigates the complaint.
What Happens After A
Complaint Investigation?
If, after investigating
your complaint, HUD finds reasonable cause to believe that discrimination
occurred, it will inform you. Your case will be heard in an administrative
hearing within 120 days, unless you or the respondent want the case to be
heard in Federal district court. Either way, there is no cost to you.
The Administrative
Hearing:
If your case goes to an
administrative hearing HUD attorneys will litigate the case on your
behalf. You may intervene in the case and be represented by your own
attorney if you wish. An Administrative Law Judge (ALA) will consider
evidence from you and the respondent. If the ALA decides that
discrimination occurred, the respondent can be ordered:
- To compensate you for
actual damages, including humiliation, pain and suffering.
- To provide injunctive or
other equitable relief, for example, to make the housing available to
you.
- To pay the Federal
Government a civil penalty to vindicate the public interest. The
maximum penalties are $10,000 for a first violation and $50,000 for a
third violation within seven years.
- To pay reasonable
attorney's fees and costs.
Federal District Court
If you or the respondent
choose to have your case decided in Federal District Court, the Attorney
General will file a suit and litigate it on your behalf. Like the ALA, the
District Court can order relief, and award actual damages, attorney's fees
and costs. In addition, the court can award punitive damages.
In Addition
You May File Suit:
You may file suit, at your expense, in Federal District Court or State
Court within two years of an alleged violation. If you cannot afford an
attorney, the Court may appoint one for you. You may bring suit even after
filing a complaint, if you have not signed a conciliation agreement and an
Administrative Law Judge has not started a hearing. A court may award
actual and punitive damages and attorney's fees and costs.
Other Tools to Combat
Housing Discrimination:
If there is noncompliance
with the order of an Administrative Law Judge, HUD may seek temporary
relief, enforcement of the order or a restraining order in a United States
Court of Appeals.
The Attorney General may
file a suit in a Federal District Court if there is reasonable cause to
believe a pattern or practice of housing discrimination is occurring.
For Further Information:
The Fair Housing Act and
HUD's regulations contain more detail and technical information. If you
need a copy of the law or regulations, contact the HUD
Office nearest you.
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