Fair Housing
A Connecticut senior living community (55+ housing) wants to qualify for the Fair Housing Act exemption. Which of the following would DISQUALIFY the community from the exemption?
AMaintaining policies specifically intended to house 55+ residents
BHaving 80% of occupied units with at least one resident 55 or older
CAccepting residents as young as 40 in 30% of units✓ Correct
DConducting HUD-required surveys every two years
Explanation
To qualify for the 55-or-older exemption, at least 80% of occupied units must have at least one resident 55 or older. Accepting younger residents in 30% of units would prevent the community from meeting the 80% threshold and would disqualify it from the exemption.
Related Connecticut Fair Housing Questions
- Steering in real estate means:
- Connecticut's Human Rights and Opportunities Act (CFEPA) is enforced by the:
- Connecticut's Fair Housing Act applies to discrimination based on 'marital status.' This protects:
- The Fair Housing Act allows an exemption for private clubs that own or operate lodgings NOT open to the public. This exemption means the club can:
- A Connecticut tenant with a service dog for a disability asks to keep the dog despite a no-pets lease clause. The landlord must:
- Which of the following is an exemption to the federal Fair Housing Act?
- Redlining refers to the illegal practice of:
- A Connecticut real estate agent agrees to show a buyer only homes in specific school districts that happen to correspond to majority-white neighborhoods. Without the buyer's request, this is likely:
Practice More Connecticut Real Estate Questions
1,500+ questions covering all exam topics. Start free — no signup required.
Take the Free Connecticut Quiz →