Fair Housing
A landlord refuses to allow a tenant with a disability to make reasonable modifications to an apartment. This is:
APermissible if the landlord pays for modifications
BA violation of the Fair Housing Act✓ Correct
CLegal if the building was built before 1988
DPermissible if fewer than 4 units are in the building
Explanation
The Fair Housing Act requires landlords to allow tenants with disabilities to make reasonable modifications at the tenant's expense. Refusing such modifications is a violation, regardless of building age.
Related Connecticut Fair Housing Questions
- A Connecticut real estate agent who is a member of NAR violates fair housing principles. NAR's Code of Ethics requires the agent to:
- A Connecticut seller receives two identical offers—one from a White buyer and one from a Black buyer. The seller accepts the White buyer's offer because of the buyer's race. Under the Fair Housing Act, this is:
- A Connecticut landlord asks a tenant who uses a wheelchair whether they need any accommodations before signing a lease. Under fair housing law, this inquiry is:
- Connecticut's 'affirmatively furthering fair housing' obligation requires municipalities receiving federal housing funds to:
- A Connecticut lender requires a higher interest rate from borrowers in a certain ZIP code, regardless of creditworthiness. This is an example of:
- Under Connecticut fair housing law, a real estate licensee who knowingly participates in discriminatory housing practices may face:
- A Connecticut licensee's client makes clear they only want to see properties in neighborhoods without a significant Hispanic population. The agent's professional and legal obligation is to:
- A Connecticut real estate broker who receives a fair housing complaint must:
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