Fair Housing
A Utah apartment complex advertises that it is 'a quiet adult community' in a multi-unit building that does not qualify for the HOPA senior exemption. This is:
APermissible as a lifestyle description
BA potential Fair Housing violation by expressing a preference against families with children✓ Correct
CRequired disclosure under Utah's real estate advertising rules
DPermissible if the management company has an adult-preference policy
Explanation
Advertising an 'adult community' that does not qualify for the HOPA exemption (which requires 80% of units occupied by persons 55+) suggests a preference against families with children—a Fair Housing violation. The familial status protection applies to most residential housing.
Related Utah Fair Housing Questions
- A property owner with a building that has 5 units is exempt from the federal Fair Housing Act if the owner occupies one of the units:
- A Utah insurance company that refuses to issue homeowner's insurance in a neighborhood because of its racial composition is engaging in:
- Blockbusting (panic selling) involves:
- A Utah landlord may ask a tenant requesting an emotional support animal (ESA) to:
- A real estate agent who shows a buyer homes only in certain neighborhoods because of the buyer's race is committing:
- A Utah landlord who denies a rental application because of the applicant's disability is committing a Fair Housing violation. If the landlord claims the denial was for a different reason, HUD will examine:
- Redlining is defined as:
- HUD's role in Fair Housing enforcement includes:
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