Questions and Answers on Fair Housing
The purpose of the fair housing laws is to
protect a person's right to own, sell, purchase, or rent housing of his or her
choice without fear of unlawful discrimination. The fair housing laws are intended
to allow everyone equal access to housing. State and Federal fair housing laws
prohibit discrimination in the housing market on the basis of race, color, sex,
religion, national origin, handicap, or familial status. To discriminate against
a person on the basis of his or her membership in one of these protected categories
is against the law. This information focuses primarily on the fair housing laws
as they are applied in the State of North Carolina.
Do the fair housing laws apply to all housing transactions?
Yes, except for the following limited exemptions:
-
The rental of a unit in a multi-family dwelling
with not more than four units where the owner (or a member of the owner's family)
lives in one of the units.
-
The rental of a room or rooms in a private
house where the owner (or a member of the owner's family) lives in the house.
-
Lodging owned or operated by private clubs
which give preference to their members Religious, charitable, or educational institutions
or organizations which are operated, supervised, or controlled by religious institutions
or organizations that give preference in real estate transactions to their members,
provided the organization does not exclude members of a protected category.
-
Single-sex dormitories.
What are some common unlawful acts of discrimination?
Refusing to sell, rent or negotiate - It
is against the law to take any of the following actions because a person is a
member of one of the protected categories:
-
To refuse to engage in a real estate transaction.
-
To refuse to rent or sell housing.
-
To discriminate in terms, conditions, or
privileges for the sale or rental of housing .
-
To refuse to receive or fail to transmit
a bona fide offer to engage in a real estate transaction To indicate that housing
is not available when it actually is available.
-
To discriminate by providing different
facilities or services.
-
To refuse to negotiate for housing
Steering - Discouraging a person from seeking housing in a particular community,
neighborhood, or development because the person is or is not a member of a protected
category. For example, a real estate agent shows a black person housing in predominately
black neighborhoods and a white person housing in predominately white neighborhoods.
Interference, coercion, or intimidation -
Trying to limit the benefits of renting or buying housing in an area because the
person is a member of one of the protected categories. This includes trying to
coerce, threaten, intimidate, retaliate against, or interfere in any way with
the use and enjoyment of housing.
Discriminatory advertising - Advertising or
making any statement which indicates directly or indirectly an intent to make
a limitation, specification, or to discriminate with respect to members of one
of the protected categories.
Blockbusting (also referred to as panic peddling)
- Trying, in a direct or subtle way, to scare a person into moving out of a neighborhood
by representing that a person from one of the protected categories is considering
or is in fact moving into the neighborhood. For example, stating that the neighborhood
would decline or that the crime rate would increase if members of a protected
category moved into the neighborhood would be unlawful.
Redlining - Being denied or subjected to stricter
conditions in applying for a loan on property in a particular area because of
the racial composition of the area, including loans to purchase, construct, improve,
repair, or maintain housing.
Can a person other than the seller or landlord be guilty
of violating the fair housing laws?
Yes. Anyone involved in the real estate transaction
who discriminates based on a protected category has violated the fair housing
laws. For example, a local banker informs a real estate agent that if the agent
allows anyone else with kids to move into the neighborhood, the bank will not
do business with the agent or the agent's customers.
Does an owner have to rent or sell to a person just because
he or she is in a protected category?
No. Owners may rent or sell to whomever they
choose as long as their decisions are not based on the fact that a would-be tenant
or buyer is a member of a protected category. If someone from a protected category
becomes a tenant, the owner may hold that tenant to the same standard of performance
and behavior as everyone else.
Can landlords protect themselves from complaints of discrimination
when they reject someone from a protected category?
Yes. A landlord should have detailed standards
for deciding who is acceptable as a tenant and who is not. However, these standards
may not be based upon a prospective tenant's membership in a protected category.
Such standards are particularly important in decisions to reject a tenant applicant
because of poor credit, and to place would-be tenants on a "waiting list."
The landlord should then apply these standards equally to every tenant applicant.
If a waiting list is used, the landlord must make sure that every applicant who
is told that his or her name will be placed on the list is indeed put there and
that, as an applicant's name comes up, the applicant is notified of this fact.
What conditions are considered handicaps under the fair
housing laws?
Handicapping condition exists if someone
has a physical or mental impairment which substantially limits one or more major
life activities. Some examples are: physical disability, mental illness or retardation,
cerebral palsy, muscular dystrophy, cancer, heart disease, Human Immunodeficiency
Virus (HIV) infection or AIDS, drug addiction (other than addiction caused by
current, illegal use of a controlled substance) and alcoholism. However, a landlord
does not have to rent to anyone, including a handicapped person, who would constitute
a genuine, direct threat to the health or safety of other tenants or whose tenancy
would result in substantial physical damage to the property of others.
Does a landlord have to allow a handicapped person to
make modifications to a rental unit?
Yes. A landlord must allow a handicapped
person to make reasonable modifications to the existing premises as necessary
for the full enjoyment of the premises, such as widening doorways, installing
handrails, and installing wheelchair ramps. However, the handicapped person is
responsible for the cost of the modifications. A landlord may condition permission
to make modifications on the tenant's agreeing to restore the interior of the
premises to the original condition if the modifications made by the handicapped
tenant would interfere with the next tenant's reasonable use and enjoyment of
the property. The landlord may also withhold permission until seeing a description
of the proposed modifications which provides reasonable assurance that the modifications
will be done in a workmanlike manner. [Note: All multifamily dwellings covered
by the fair housing laws and ready for first occupancy after March 13, 1991, have
to be designed and constructed so that few, if any, modifications will be necessary.]
Can a landlord charge a higher security deposit to a handicapped
person who makes modifications to a rental unit?
No. However, if the nature of the modifications
is such as would interfere with the next tenant's use and enjoyment of the property,
and correction of the modifications would be especially costly, the landlord may,
as part of a restoration agreement between the landlord and tenant, require the
tenant to pay into an interest-bearing escrow account a reasonable amount to cover
restoration costs. The tenant would be entitled to any interest which accrues
on the escrow account.
Does a landlord have to make other accommodations for
a handicapped tenant?
Yes. A landlord must make reasonable accommodations
in rules, policies, practices, or services as necessary to afford a handicapped
person equal opportunity to use and enjoy a housing unit, including public and
common use areas; for example, allowing a visually-impaired tenant to have an
aid dog in a community where no pets are allowed, and allowing a tenant with a
serious heart condition to have a reserved parking space close to the tenant's
apartment.
If a landlord has available units which are equipped for
the handicapped, does a handicapped person have to take one of those units?
No. A landlord can advise a handicapped person
of the availability of specially equipped units, but the handicapped person must
be allowed to choose from any of the units which are available.
Can persons with children be denied housing on that basis?
No. The fair housing laws protect a person
who (1) has a child under the age of 18, (2) has legal custody of a child, (3)
is designated by the parent to care for a child (provided that the designee has
written permission from the parent), (4) is pregnant, or (5) is in the process
of obtaining legal custody of a child. However, the fair housing laws do not protect
persons denied housing because they are single, married, or living with someone.
Are "adults only" communities allowed?
No, unless they qualify for one of the two
exemptions which allow for adults only housing for housing elderly persons. [Note:
There are numerous requirements which must be met to qualify for these exemptions.
Contact the North Carolina Human Relations Commission for further details.] If
a housing complex qualifies for the elderly person exemption, then it may discriminate
based on familial status only. It may not discriminate on the basis of any of
the other protected categories.
Can an owner or agent segregate families with children
from other tenants?
No. A member of a protected category may
not be assigned to a particular section of a community, neighborhood or development,
or to a particular floor of a building because of being a member of a particular
category.
Can a landlord or agent limit the number of children allowed
in a bedroom, or prohibit the sharing of bedrooms by children of the opposite sex?
No. Although a landlord may set "occupancy
standards' for the number of people that will be allowed to live in a unit, the
standards should not be based on the age or sex of the individuals. [Note: The
fair housing laws do not limit the applicability of any reasonable local, State,
or Federal restrictions regarding the maximum number of persons permitted to occupy
a housing unit.]
May a real estate agent discriminate at the direction
of the owner?
No. Even if a real estate agent has no discriminatory
intent, the agent is in violation of the fair housing laws when discriminating
against persons from one of the protected categories at the direction of the owner
or lessor. Likewise, an agent is in violation if he or she knows that members
of protected categories may be unlawfully rejected by the owner or lessor.
What should a real estate agent do if he or she finds
out that the seller or landlord intends to discriminate against a member of a protected
category?
The agent should immediately terminate the
agency relationship with the seller or landlord. The agent should then send a
letter to the seller or landlord stating that the relationship has been terminated
and explaining why. Next, the agent should inform any other agents or other parties
to the transaction that he or she no longer represents the seller or landlord.
Can a real estate agentdecline to show property in a particular
area because members of a protected category reside in that area?
No. This is steering, even if the buyer requests
it. The real estate agent should inform the buyer that he or she can show property
based on any of the buyer's other criteria, but not the presence or absence in
the area of members of a protected category.
Is a real estate brokerage firm in violation of the fair
housing laws if one of its employees or agents unlawfully discriminates?
Yes.
Can a real estate agent answer questions about the characteristics
of a neighborhood if the questions concern one of the protected categories?
No.
Is it a violation of the fair housing laws to deny an
agent who is a member of a protected category access to real estate related services?
Yes. It is a violation of the fair housing
laws to deny a qualified real estate agent access to or membership in any membership
listing service, real estate brokers' organization or other service, organization,
or facility relating to the business of selling or renting housing, because he
or she is a member of one of the protected categories.
Can a violation of the fair housing law affect a real
estate broker's or salesman's license?
Yes. A violation of the fair housing laws
is a violation of the North Carolina Real Estate License Law; therefore, it could
result in suspension or revocation of the agent's license by the North Carolina
Real Estate Commission.
What should I do if I suspect that I or someone else has
experienced unlawful discrimination in a housing transaction?
You may file a complaint or notify the North
Carolina Human Relations Commission (NCHRC), 217 W. Jones St., Raleigh, NC 27603-1336.
(Phone: 919/733-7996). However, the complaint must be filed within one year after
the alleged violation occurred. The North Carolina Human Relations Commission
will be glad to answer any questions you may have.
What happens after I file a complaint?
The NCHRC will investigate to determine whether
unlawful discrimination has occurred. If it has, the NCHRC will attempt to eliminate
or correct the discriminatory practice by informal conference, persuasion, or
conciliation. If it is unable to resolve the matter:
1. you may request a right-to-sue letter so
that you may file a civil lawsuit;
2. the NCHRC may file a lawsuit for you; or
3. if neither of the two previous options
is taken, an administrative hearing may take place where a final decision on the
matter will be made.
If the NCHRC fails to find that discrimination
has taken place, it will dismiss the complaint and issue a right-to-sue letter.
Of course, you have the right to file a civil
suit, at your expense, at any time based on a violation of the fair housing laws
without filing a complaint with the NCHRC.
|