My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Hawaii Analysis of Impediment Nov 2016 Appendices
PublicDocuments
>
Office of Housing and Community Development
>
Fair Housing and Equal Opportunity in Housing
>
Hawaii Analysis of Impediment Nov 2016 Appendices
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
2/10/2017 3:16:48 PM
Creation date
2/10/2017 3:16:40 PM
Metadata
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
169
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
To take action against, or deny a permit, for a home because of the disability of <br />individuals who live or would live there. An example would be denying a building permit <br />for a home because it was intended to provide housing for persons with mental <br />retardation. <br />To refuse to make reasonable accommodations in land use and zoning policies and <br />procedures where such accommodations may be necessary to afford persons or groups <br />of persons with disabilities an equal opportunity to use and enjoy housing. What <br />constitutes a reasonable accommodation is a case-by-case determination. Not all <br />requested modifications of rules or policies are reasonable. If a requested modification <br />imposes an undue financial or administrative burden on a local government, or if a <br />modification creates a fundamental alteration in a local government's land use and <br />zoning scheme, it is not a "reasonable" accommodation. <br />There has been a significant amount of litigation concerning the ability of local governmental <br />units to exercise control over group living arrangements, particularly for persons with <br />disabilities. To provide guidance on these issues, the Departments of Justice and Housing and <br />Urban Development have issued a Joint Statement on Group Homes, Local Land Use and the <br />Fair Housing Act. <br /> <br />Discrimination in Housing Based Upon Disability -- Accessibility Features for New Construction <br />The Fair Housing Act defines discrimination in housing against persons with disabilities to <br />include a failure "to design and construct" certain new multi-family dwellings so that they are <br />accessible to and usable by persons with disabilities, and particularly people who use <br />wheelchairs. The Act requires all newly constructed multi-family dwellings of four or more units <br />intended for first occupancy after March 13, 1991, to have certain features: an accessible <br />entrance on an accessible route, accessible common and public use areas, doors sufficiently <br />wide to accommodate wheelchairs, accessible routes into and through each dwelling, light <br />switches, electrical outlets, and thermostats in accessible location, reinforcements in bathroom <br />walls to accommodate grab bar installations, and usable kitchens and bathrooms configured so <br />that a wheelchair can maneuver about the space. <br /> <br />Developers, builders, owners, and architects responsible for the design or construction of new <br />multi-family housing may be held liable under the Fair Housing Act if their buildings fail to meet <br />these design requirements. The Department of Justice has brought many enforcement actions <br />against those who failed to do so. Most of the cases have been resolved by consent decrees <br />providing a variety of types of relief, including: retrofitting to bring inaccessible features into <br />compliance where feasible and where it is not -- alternatives (monetary funds or other <br />construction requirements) that will provide for making other housing units accessible; training <br />on the accessibility requirements for those involved in the construction process; a mandate that <br />all new housing projects comply with the accessibility requirements, and monetary relief for <br />those injured by the violations. In addition, the Department has sought to promote accessibility <br />through building codes. <br /> <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.