Fair Housing
A Connecticut real estate licensee charged with a fair housing violation has the right to:
APay a fine and continue without any process
BAdministrative due process: notice, opportunity to respond, and a hearing✓ Correct
CAutomatically be exempt if they have a clean prior record
DChoose their own investigator
Explanation
A licensee charged with a violation is entitled to due process: notice of the complaint, an opportunity to respond, and a fair hearing before any discipline is imposed.
Related Connecticut Fair Housing Questions
- A Connecticut landlord with 12 units refuses to rent to a qualified applicant because of the applicant's religion. The maximum civil penalty for a first violation of the federal Fair Housing Act can be up to:
- A Connecticut real estate agent who only shows homes in neighborhoods matching the buyer's ethnic background (without the buyer requesting this) is engaged in:
- Under the Fair Housing Act, a person who believes they have experienced housing discrimination must file a complaint with HUD within:
- A Connecticut real estate agent shows a minority buyer only homes in predominantly minority neighborhoods while showing white buyers the same-priced homes in all neighborhoods. This is:
- Under Connecticut fair housing law, 'gender identity or expression' is a protected class. This means:
- Which of the following is an exemption to the federal Fair Housing Act?
- A landlord refuses to allow a tenant with a disability to make reasonable modifications to an apartment. This is:
- A Connecticut lender requires a higher interest rate from borrowers in a certain ZIP code, regardless of creditworthiness. This is an example of:
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