Fair Housing
What is 'economic integration' as a fair housing concept and how does it apply in Nevada?
AA requirement that all Nevada HOAs accept low-income residents
BThe policy goal of providing housing opportunities for people of various income levels in all neighborhoods, not just concentrating poverty in certain areas✓ Correct
CA Nevada law requiring equal incomes in housing developments
DA banking policy requiring equal lending in all zip codes
Explanation
Economic integration (deconcentration of poverty) is a fair housing goal — ensuring lower-income families have housing choices throughout a metro area, not just in concentrated poverty areas. Nevada's AFFH analysis examines economic segregation and requires plans to expand housing opportunity across communities.
Related Nevada Fair Housing Questions
- What is a housing segregation study and how has it affected Nevada's major cities?
- What is 'housing counseling' and who provides it in Nevada?
- What is the role of the 'Nevada Equal Rights Commission' (NERC) in housing discrimination?
- What is 'disparate treatment' in fair housing law?
- What is a protected class under Nevada's additional fair housing protections beyond federal law?
- Redlining refers to which discriminatory practice in real estate and lending?
- What is 'steering' in real estate and how does Nevada law address it?
- What is an 'affirmatively furthering fair housing' (AFFH) requirement for Nevada local governments receiving HUD funds?
Practice More Nevada Real Estate Questions
1,500+ questions covering all exam topics. Start free — no signup required.
Take the Free Nevada Quiz →