fair housing & service animals equal access begins with knowing the law!

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FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

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Page 1: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

FAIR HOUSING &

SERVICE ANIMALS

EQUAL ACCESS

BEGINS WITH

KNOWING THE LAW!

Page 2: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

I’m Glad You Asked…

• Who am I?

Michele Howard

• What is it that I do?

Civil Rights Specialist

• Where do I work?

Iowa Civil Rights Commission (ICRC)

Page 3: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Iowa Civil Rights Commission

ICRC is a neutral, fact-finding administrative agency that enforces the "Iowa Civil Rights Act of

1965," Iowa's anti-discrimination law.  

Page 4: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

APRIL

IS

FAIR HOUSING MONTH!

Page 5: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Fair Housing laws

Service Animals And

Emotional Support AnimalsIn Multi-Family Housing

Page 6: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Fair Housing Laws

• Federal laws• Civil Rights Act of

1866• Civil Rights Act of

1968, Title VIII• Fair Housing

Amendments Act of 1988 (FHAA)

• State law• Iowa Civil Rights Act,

Chapter 216 of the Iowa Code and Chapter 161 of the Iowa Admin Code

• Local (city or county) ordinances may also apply

Page 7: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Fair Housing Laws

Federal Law: The Federal Civil Rights Act of 1866

prohibits discrimination in housing because of race or color.

The Civil Rights Act of 1968, Title VII, and the Fair Housing Amendments Act of 1989 prohibit discrimination in housing because

of race, color, sex, religion, national origin, disability, and familial status.

Page 8: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Fair Housing Laws

State Law:

Iowa Civil Rights Act (Iowa Code 216)

Prohibits housing discrimination based on race, color, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, religion, national

origin, mental & physical disability, and familial status (presence of children in

the home).

Page 9: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Iowa City Human Rights Commission Iowa City HRC is one of 26 local civil rights

commissions located throughout Iowa. Iowa City HRC receives its authority from the Iowa

City Human Rights Ordinance, to investigate, conciliate and determine remedies for discrimination in the areas of credit, employment, housing and public accommodations and education.

Bases Covered: race, color, creed, religion, national origin, age, sex, marital status, sexual orientation, family status, presence or absence of dependents, disability or public assistance as a source of income.

Page 10: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Working Together to

Fight Discrimination

ICRC has a “Work-Share” agreement with the U.S. Dept. of

Housing and Urban Development, a.k.a. HUD to process

and investigate claims of housing discrimination.

Iowa City also has a work share agreement; may file with ICHRC or

with ICRC if the incident occurred within Iowa City’s limits.

Page 11: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Points of Clarification• There is a difference between the laws regarding the use

of service animals in housing versus the use of service animals in public accommodations.

• Recent DOJ amendments to its ADA regulations DO NOT affect reasonable accommodation requests under the FHA and Sec. 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1974.

• The new ADA rules defines “service animal” as any dog that is individually trained to do work or perform tasks for the benefit of an individual with a disability, including a physical, sensory, psychiatric, intellectual, or other mental disability.

• The new DOJ rules specify that “the provision of emotional support, well-being, comfort, or companionship do not constitute work or tasks for the purposes of this definition.” (under ADA, Public Accommodations)

Page 12: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

What does this mean?

• It means that trained dogs are the only species of animals that may qualify as service animals under the ADA (there is a separate provision regarding miniature horses) and

• Emotional support animals are expressly precluded from qualifying as service animals under the ADA* as it relates to public accommodations.

*Source: U.S. Dept. of Housing and Urban Development Memo, Feb. 17, 2011.

Page 13: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

• Fair Housing Act definition:a)A physical or mental impairment which substantially

limits one or more of a person’s major life activities,

b)A record of having such an impairment, or

c)Being regarded as having such an impairment

Physical or mental impairment: any physiological disorder or condition of a major body system or any mental or psychological disorder.

What is a disability?

Page 14: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Major Life Activities

Examples of major life activities include:

Caring for oneself Performing manual tasks Seeing, hearing, eating Walking Communicating, interacting with others

Page 15: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

THREE CLASSES OF ANIMALS:

Service Animals: Animals individually trained to perform tasks for the benefit of an individual with a physical, intellectual, and/or mental disability

Emotional Support Animals: Provides therapeutic benefit to a person with a mental or psychiatric disability

Pets: Animals living with owners for the purposes of love, affection, and/or company

What is a service animal?

Page 16: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Examples

• Service Animals:– Vision Impairment:

• guiding individuals with impaired vision

– Physical Impairment:• Providing protection or rescue work• Pulling a wheelchair• Fetching dropped items

Page 17: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Examples

• Emotional Support Animals:

– Post Traumatic Stress Disorder– Anxiety Disorder– Depression– Bipolar Diagnosis

Page 18: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Service Animals and Emotional Support Animals ARE NOT Pets

• Important to remember:

Animals needed to assist, support or provide service for persons with disabilities are not pets and therefore not subject to certain conditions of pet ownership.

Page 19: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Service Animals and Emotional Support Animals ARE NOT Pets

Usual conditions of tenancy: • ‘No pet’ policy• Payment of a pet deposit• Pet rent• Limitations on the number of animals in the unit• Prohibitions on individual animals based on size

and weight

Since service and emotional support animals are not pets, they are not subject to the above conditions.

Page 20: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Reasonable Accommodations

• If an applicant, a tenant, or someone associated with a tenant, i.e. a family member or friend, has a disability, he/she may request what is called a reasonable accommodation.

• A reasonable accommodation is a change in rules, policies, practices or services which allows the tenant to have an equal opportunity to use and enjoy the residential dwelling.

Page 21: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Reasonable Accommodations

• The request for an accommodation:– Tenants can request an accommodation orally or in

writing– “When making the request, the tenant should explain

what type of accommodations he/she is requesting and the relationship between the requested accommodation and the disability.”

• What is the accommodation?• How does the accommodation help the disability?

Page 22: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Reasonable Accommodations

• The request:– Do not ask the tenant: “What is the disability?”

– “A landlord may request only information that is necessary to evaluate the disability-related need for the accommodation.”

– Do ask the tenant: “What are the effects of the disability, and how does the [requested accommodation] help it?”

Page 23: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Reasonable Accommodations

• The request:– If the disability is not obvious, a landlord may ask for

further information about the disability that is:• Necessary to verify the person meets the definition of a

person with a disability;• Describes the needed accommodation; and,• Shows the relationship between the accommodation and the

person’s disability.

Page 24: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Reasonable Accommodations

• A doctor’s note containing the information is generally adequate, though not necessary

• Tenant is not required to show detailed medical records concerning the disability

• For emotional support animals: documentation from a physician, psychiatrist, social worker, or other mental health professional that the animal provides support that alleviates at least one of the identified effects of the disability is adequate.

Page 25: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Reasonable Accommodations

• When can a landlord refuse a reasonable accommodation?– A landlord can refuse a reasonable accommodation if it will:

• Be an undue financial or administrative burden on the landlord

• Fundamentally alter the nature of the provider’s operations• Results in substantial physical damage to the property of

others unless the threat can be eliminated or significantly reduced by alternative means

• Poses a direct threat to the health or safety of others

Also remember: tenant does not have to use any “magic words” when requesting an accommodation!

Page 26: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

What can’t a landlord do?

• A landlord cannot flat out refuse an accommodation request.

• A landlord can’t ask a tenant to pay a deposit, fee or surcharge in exchange for having a service or support animal even if they require such fees from pet owners.

• A landlord can’t require the service or support animal to have any specific training or certification.

• A landlord can’t require the service or emotional support animal to wear or carry any special collar, harness, vest, emblem or other means of identifying it as such.

Page 27: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

What should a landlord do?

• A landlord should engage in an interactive process to determine the needs of the tenant and whether the accommodation can be made.

• A landlord should respond as promptly as possible to the request; an extended amount of time can be seen as a refusal to accommodate.

Page 28: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

What can a landlord do?

• Landlords can request proof of current vaccination and/or license for the service and/ or emotional support animal.

• Landlords can expect the tenant to conform to the rules of the complex, i.e. picking up animal waste, maintaining the unit to the extent expected of every other tenant.

• Landlords may charge for actual damages caused to the premises by the emotional support and/or service animal.– Cannot charge pet deposit for potential damages but

can charge for damage actually done to the property.

Page 29: FAIR HOUSING & SERVICE ANIMALS EQUAL ACCESS BEGINS WITH KNOWING THE LAW!

Questions, Comments, Concerns

IOWA CIVIL RIGHTS COMMISSIONGRIMES STATE OFFICE BUILDING

400 EAST 14TH STREETDES MOINES, IA 50319

515-281-4121 OR 800-457-4416http://www.state.ia.us/government/crc/index.html

US DEPARTMENT OF HOUSING AND URBAN DEVELOPMENTOFFICE OF FAIR HOUSING & EQUAL OPPORTUNITY

400 STATE AVENUEGATEWAY TOWER II

KANSAS CITY, KS 66101913-551-6958 OR 800-743-5323

www.HUD.gov