Every owner and manager of a housing development understands (or should understand) that disabled applicants and residents have the right to request that properties be modified (reasonable modifications) or that rules be changed or waived (reasonable accommodations) so that the disabled person has an equal opportunity to use and enjoy the housing. However, the law does not require that every request for an accommodation be granted. Requests may be denied if there is no need for the requested accommodation or if granting the request would impose an undue financial and administrative burden on the property or fundamentally alter how the property operates.
In order to demonstrate that an owner has violated fair housing law by failing to grant an accommodation request, an applicant or resident must prove that:
While owners often believe that any requested accommodation must be granted, this is not the case, as illustrated by a number of recent court cases. In this series of articles, I will examine court cases that have ruled against residents for requested accommodations relating to assistance animals, noise complaints, and smoking. This first article deals with the issue of whether a community has to permit a resident to keep a dangerous assistance animal.
Borenstein v. Nellis Gardens, Nevada, May 2019
This case makes it clear that dangerous animals do not have to be permitted as assistance animals if there is proof that the animal presents a direct threat to other residents.
Facts of the Case
Reasoning
This case reiterates what other similar cases have shown - under fair housing law, communities may deny a request for an assistance animal if the specific animal would pose a direct threat to the health and safety of others - or would cause substantial physical damage to the property of others, and the risk cannot be reduced or eliminated by another reasonable accommodation.
The next article in this series will cover a case that answers the question as to whether a community has to soundproof a unit due to a claim of excess noise.
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