Fair Housing
An Alaska real estate professional who successfully completes fair housing training will understand that the most important principle in fair housing is:
AAll buyers should be treated identically, regardless of their needs
BEqual treatment in outcomes and consistent application of policies regardless of protected class membership✓ Correct
CAgents should never discuss neighborhoods with buyers
DOnly properties without discriminatory CC&Rs may be shown
Explanation
The core of fair housing is treating all persons equally — applying the same standards, policies, and information regardless of their protected class membership. Equal treatment doesn't mean identical service for every individual, but it means that protected class status never drives different treatment.
Related Alaska Fair Housing Questions
- An Alaska developer refuses to install accessible features in a new 8-unit apartment building. This likely violates:
- The federal Fair Housing Act of 1968 prohibits discrimination based on which protected classes?
- The National Do Not Call Registry applies to real estate agents in that:
- Which exemption allows a private individual who owns no more than three single-family homes to sell without using a broker exempt from the Fair Housing Act?
- Redlining is the illegal practice of:
- An Alaska newspaper refused to print an ad it believed violated the Fair Housing Act. The Alaska licensee who submitted the ad faces:
- A fair housing complaint must be filed with HUD within how many days of the alleged discriminatory act?
- Under the Fair Housing Act, 'familial status' is defined as:
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