U.S. Department of Justice
Civil Rights Division
Housing and Civil Enforcement Section
The Fair Housing Act
The
Fair Housing Act, 42 U.S.C. 3601 et seq., prohibits
discrimination by direct providers of housing, such as landlords and real
estate companies as well as other entities, such as municipalities, banks or
other lending institutions and homeowners insurance companies whose
discriminatory practices make housing unavailable to persons because of:
In cases involving discrimination in mortgage loans or
home improvement loans, the Department may file suit under both the Fair
Housing Act and the
Equal Credit
Opportunity Act.
Under the Fair Housing Act, the Department of Justice may
bring lawsuits where there is reason to believe that a person or entity is
engaged in a "pattern
or practice" of discrimination or where a denial of rights to a group of
persons raises an issue of general public importance.
Where force or threat of force is used to deny or
interfere with fair housing rights, the Department of Justice may institute
criminal
proceedings.
The Fair Housing Act also provides procedures for
handling
individual complaints of discrimination. Individuals who believe that
they have been victims of an illegal housing practice, may file a complaint
with the Department of Housing
and Urban Development [HUD] or file their own lawsuit in federal or
state court. The Department of Justice brings suits on behalf of individuals
based on referrals from HUD.

One of the central objectives of the
Fair Housing Act,
when Congress enacted it in 1968, was to prohibit race discrimination in
sales and rentals of housing. Nevertheless, more than 30 years later, race
discrimination in housing continues to be a problem. The majority of the
Justice Department's
pattern or
practice cases involve claims of race discrimination.
Sometimes, housing providers try to disguise their
discrimination by giving false information about availability of housing,
either saying that nothing was available or steering homeseekers to certain
areas based on race. Individuals who receive such false information or
misdirection may have no knowledge that they have been victims of
discrimination. The Department of Justice has brought many cases alleging
this kind of discrimination based on race or color. In addition, the
Department's
Fair Housing Testing Program seeks to uncover this kind of hidden
discrimination and hold those responsible accountable.
Most of the mortgage lending cases brought by the
Department under the Fair Housing Act and
Equal Credit Opportunity
Act have alleged discrimination based on race or color. Some of the
Department's cases have also alleged that municipalities and other local
government entities violated the Fair Housing Act when they denied permits
or zoning changes for housing developments, or relegated them to
predominantly minority neighborhoods, because the prospective residents were
expected to be predominantly African-Americans.

The
Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination in housing based upon
religion. This prohibition covers instances of overt discrimination against
members of a particular religion as well less direct actions, such as zoning
ordinances designed to limit the use of private homes as a places of
worship. The number of cases filed since 1968 alleging religious
discrimination is small in comparison to some of the other prohibited bases,
such as race or national origin.
The Act does contain a limited exception that allows
non-commercial housing operated by a religious organization to reserve such
housing to persons of the same religion.

The
Fair Housing Act makes it unlawful to discriminate in housing on the
basis of sex. In recent years, the Department's focus in this area has been
to challenge sexual harassment in housing. Women, particularly those who are
poor, and with limited housing options, often have little recourse but to
tolerate the humiliation and degradation of sexual harassment or risk having
their families and themselves removed from their homes. The Department's
enforcement program is aimed at landlords who create an untenable living
environment by demanding sexual favors from tenants or by creating a
sexually hostile environment for them. In this manner we seek both to obtain
relief for tenants who have been treated unfairly by a landlord because of
sex and also deter other potential abusers by making it clear that they
cannot continue their conduct without facing repercussions.
In addition, pricing discrimination in mortgage lending
may also adversely affect women, particularly minority women. This type of
discrimination is unlawful under both the Fair Housing Act and
Equal Credit
Opportunity Act.

The
Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination based upon national origin.
Such discrimination can be based either upon the country of an individual's
birth or where his or her ancestors originated.
Census data indicate that the Hispanic population is the
fastest growing segment of our nation's population. The Justice Department
has taken enforcement action against municipal governments that have tried
to reduce or limit the number of Hispanic families that may live in their
communities. We have sued lenders under both the
Fair Housing Act
and the Equal Credit
Opportunity Act when they have imposed more stringent underwriting
standards on home loans or made loans on less favorable terms for Hispanic
borrowers. The Department has also sued lenders for discrimination against
Native Americans.
Other areas of the country have experienced an increasing
diversity of national origin groups within their populations. This includes
new immigrants from Southeastern Asia, such as the Hmong, the former Soviet
Union, and other portions of Eastern Europe. We have taken action against
private landlords who have discriminated against such individuals.

The
Fair Housing Act, with some exceptions, prohibits discrimination in
housing against families with children under 18. In addition to prohibiting
an outright denial of housing to families with children, the Act also
prevents housing providers from imposing any special requirements or
conditions on tenants with custody of children. For example, landlords may
not locate families with children in any single portion of a complex, place
an unreasonable restriction on the total number of persons who may reside in
a dwelling, or limit their access to recreational services provided to other
tenants.
In most instances, the amended Fair Housing Act prohibits
a housing provider from refusing to rent or sell to families with children.
However, some facilities may be designated as Housing for Older Persons (55
years of age). This type of housing, which meets the standards set forth in
the Housing for Older Persons Act of 1995, may operate as "senior" housing.
The Department of Housing and
Urban Development (HUD) has published regulations and additional
guidance detailing these statutory requirements.

The
Fair Housing Act prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability in
all types of housing transactions. The Act defines persons with a disability
to mean those individuals with mental or physical impairments that
substantially limit one or more major life activities. The term mental or
physical impairment may include conditions such as blindness, hearing
impairment, mobility impairment, HIV infection, mental retardation,
alcoholism, drug addiction, chronic fatigue, learning disability, head
injury, and mental illness. The term major life activity may include seeing,
hearing, walking, breathing, performing manual tasks, caring for one's self,
learning, speaking, or working. The Fair Housing Act also protects persons
who have a record of such an impairment, or are regarded as having such an
impairment. Current users of illegal controlled substances, persons
convicted for illegal manufacture or distribution of a controlled substance,
sex offenders, and juvenile offenders are not considered disabled under the
Fair Housing Act, by virtue of that status.
The Fair Housing Act affords no protections to
individuals with or without disabilities who present a direct threat to the
persons or property of others. Determining whether someone poses such a
direct threat must be made on an individualized basis, however, and cannot
be based on general assumptions or speculation about the nature of a
disability.
The Division's enforcement of the Fair Housing Act's
protections for persons with disabilities has concentrated on two major
areas. One is insuring that zoning and other regulations
concerning land use are not employed to hinder the residential choices
of these individuals, including unnecessarily restricting communal, or
congregate, residential arrangements, such as group homes. The second area
is insuring that newly constructed multifamily housing is built in
accordance with the Fair Housing Act's accessibility
requirements so that it is accessible to and usable by people with
disabilities, and, in particular, those who use wheelchairs.
There are other federal statutes that prohibit
discrimination against individuals with disabilities, including the
Americans with Disabilities Act, which is enforced by the
Disability Rights Section
of the Civil Rights Division.

Some individuals with disabilities may live together in
congregate living arrangements, often referred to as "group homes." The
Fair Housing Act
prohibits municipalities and other local government entities from making
zoning or land use decisions or implementing land use policies that exclude
or otherwise discriminate against individuals with disabilities.
The Fair Housing Act makes it unlawful --
-
To utilize land use policies or actions that treat
groups of persons with disabilities less favorably than groups of
non-disabled persons. An example would be an ordinance prohibiting
housing for persons with disabilities or a specific type of disability,
such as mental illness, from locating in a particular area, while
allowing other groups of unrelated individuals to live together in that
area.
-
To take action against, or deny a permit, for a home
because of the disability of individuals who live or would live there.
An example would be denying a building permit for a home because it was
intended to provide housing for persons with mental retardation.
-
To refuse to make reasonable accommodations in land
use and zoning policies and procedures where such accommodations may be
necessary to afford persons or groups of persons with disabilities an
equal opportunity to use and enjoy housing. What constitutes a
reasonable accommodation is a case-by-case determination. Not all
requested modifications of rules or policies are reasonable. If a
requested modification imposes an undue financial or administrative
burden on a local government, or if a modification creates a fundamental
alteration in a local government's land use and zoning scheme, it is not
a "reasonable" accommodation.
There has been a significant amount of litigation
concerning the ability of local governmental units to exercise control over
group living arrangements, particularly for persons with disabilities. To
provide guidance on these issues, the Departments of Justice and Housing and
Urban Development have issued a
Joint Statement on
Group Homes, Local Land Use and the Fair Housing Act.

The
Fair Housing Act defines discrimination in housing against persons with
disabilities to include a failure "to design and construct" certain new
multi-family dwellings so that they are accessible to and usable by persons
with disabilities, and particularly people who use wheelchairs. The Act
requires all newly constructed multi-family dwellings of four or more units
intended for first occupancy after March 13, 1991, to have certain features:
an accessible entrance on an accessible route, accessible common and public
use areas, doors sufficiently wide to accommodate wheelchairs, accessible
routes into and through each dwelling, light switches, electrical outlets,
and thermostats in accessible location, reinforcements in bathroom walls to
accommodate grab bar installations, and usable kitchens and bathrooms
configured so that a wheelchair can maneuver about the space.
Developers, builders, owners, and architects responsible
for the design or construction of new multi-family housing may be held
liable under the Fair Housing Act if their buildings fail to meet these
design requirements. The Department of Justice has brought many enforcement
actions against those who failed to do so. Most of the cases have been
resolved by consent decrees providing a variety of types of relief,
including: retrofitting to bring inaccessible features into compliance where
feasible and where it is not -- alternatives (monetary funds or other
construction requirements) that will provide for making other housing units
accessible; training on the accessibility requirements for those involved in
the construction process; a mandate that all new housing projects comply
with the accessibility requirements, and monetary relief for those injured
by the violations. In addition, the Department has sought to
promote
accessibility through building codes.

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Division's Home Page
Page last updated 1/5/2000
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