Fair Housing
Under the Fair Housing Act, the protections for persons with disabilities include those with:
AOnly physical mobility impairments
BPhysical and mental impairments that substantially limit one or more major life activities✓ Correct
COnly conditions recognized by the Americans with Disabilities Act
DOnly conditions with a documented medical diagnosis
Explanation
The Fair Housing Act defines disability broadly: a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities, a record of having such an impairment, or being regarded as having such an impairment. This includes many physical and mental health conditions.
Related Alaska Fair Housing Questions
- Under the Fair Housing Act, the statute of limitations for filing a complaint with HUD is:
- Redlining is a fair housing violation that involves:
- A real estate agent uses different qualification criteria when evaluating buyers of different national origins. This is an example of:
- An Alaska newspaper refused to print an ad it believed violated the Fair Housing Act. The Alaska licensee who submitted the ad faces:
- Under the Fair Housing Act, a landlord may legally refuse to rent to a prospective tenant who:
- A landlord in Alaska who charges a higher security deposit from a tenant because of the tenant's national origin is engaging in:
- Under the Fair Housing Act, a person who wins a fair housing lawsuit may recover:
- A 'Mrs. Murphy exemption' under the Fair Housing Act applies to:
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