[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 7, Volume 15]

[Revised as of January 1, 2006]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 7CFR3560.104]



[Page 508-510]

 

                          TITLE 7--AGRICULTURE

 

     CHAPTER XXXV--RURAL HOUSING SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE

 

PART 3560_DIRECT MULTI-FAMILY HOUSING LOANS AND GRANTS--Table of Contents

 

      Subpart C_Borrower Management and Operations Responsibilities

 

Sec. 3560.104  Fair housing.



    (a) General. Borrowers must comply with the requirements of the Fair 

Housing Amendments Act of 1988, and this section to meet their fair 

housing responsibilities.

    (b) Affirmative Fair Housing Marketing Plan. (1) Borrowers with 

housing projects that have four or more rental units must prepare and 

maintain an Affirmative Fair Housing Marketing Plan (AFHMP) as defined 

in 24 CFR part 200, subpart M.

    (2) Loan or grant applicants must submit an AFHMP for Agency 

approval prior to loan closing or grant approval. Plans must be updated 

by the borrower whenever components of the plan change.

    (3) Borrowers must post the approved AFHMP for public inspection at 

the housing project site, rental office, or at any other location where 

tenant applications for the project are received.

    (4) When developing the plan, the following items must be considered 

by the borrower:

    (i) Direction of marketing activities. The plan should be designed 

to attract applications for occupancy from all potentially eligible 

groups of people in the housing marketing area, regardless of race, 

color, religion, sex, age, familial status, national origin, or 

disability. The plan must show which efforts will be made to reach very 

low-income or low-income groups who would least likely be expected to 

apply without special outreach efforts.

    (ii) Marketing program. The applicant or borrower should determine 

which methods of marketing such as radio, newspaper, TV, signs, etc., 

are best suited to reach those very low-income or low-income groups who 

are in the market area but who are least likely to apply for occupancy. 

Marketing must not rely on ``word of mouth'' advertising.



[[Page 509]]



    (A) Advertising. (1) Frequency. The borrower should advertise 

availability of housing units in advance of their availability to allow 

time to receive and process applications. Advertising by newsprint or 

electronic media must occur at least annually to promote project 

visibility, even if there is an adequate waiting list.

    (2) Posters, brochures, etc. Any radio, TV or newspaper 

advertisement, pamphlets, or brochures used must identify that the 

complex is operated on an equal housing opportunity basis. This must be 

done through the use of the equal housing opportunity statement, slogan, 

or logo type. Copies of the proposed material must be sent when 

requesting approval of the plan.

    (B) Community contacts. Community leaders and special interest 

groups such as community, public interest, religious organizations, and 

organizations for the disabled must be contacted. Owners and managers of 

projects with fully accessible apartments must adopt suitable means to 

ensure that information regarding the availability of accessible units 

reaches eligible persons with disabilities. In addition, owners and 

managers of elderly housing must ensure that information regarding 

eligibility reaches people who are less than 62 years old but who are 

eligible because they are disabled. Appropriate contacts are with 

physical rehabilitation centers, hospitals, workshops for the disabled, 

commissions on aging, and veterans organizations.

    (C) Rental staff. All staff persons responsible for renting the 

units must have had training provided on Federal, state, and local fair 

housing laws and regulations and in the requirements of fair housing 

marketing and in those actions necessary to carry out the marketing 

plan. Copies of instructions to the staff regarding fair housing and a 

summary of the training they have received must be attached to the plan 

when requesting approval.

    (iii) Marketing records. Records must be maintained by the borrower 

reflecting efforts to fulfill the plan. These records will be reviewed 

by the Agency during civil rights compliance reviews. Plans will be 

updated as needed.

    (c) Accommodations and communication. The borrower must take 

appropriate steps to ensure effective communication with applicants, 

tenants, and members of the public with disabilities. At a minimum, the 

following steps must be taken:

    (1) Furnish appropriate auxiliary aids (electronic, mechanical, or 

personal assistance) where necessary, to afford an individual with 

disabilities an equal opportunity to participate in and enjoy the 

benefits of Agency financed housing.

    (i) In determining what auxiliary aids are necessary, the borrower 

must give primary consideration to the requests of individuals with 

disabilities.

    (ii) The borrower is not required to provide individually prescribed 

devices, readers for personal use or study, or other devices of a 

personal nature.

    (2) Where a borrower communicates with applicants and tenants by 

telephone, telecommunication devices for deaf persons or equally 

effective communication systems must be available for use.

    (3) The borrower must implement procedures to ensure that interested 

persons, including persons with impaired vision or hearing, can obtain 

information concerning the existence and location of accessible 

services, activities, and facilities in the housing project and 

community.

    (4) The borrower is required to provide reasonable accommodations at 

the project's expense unless doing so would result in undue financial or 

administrative burden on the project. Examples of reasonable 

accommodations may include such items as the installation of grab bars, 

ramps, and roll-in showers. Reasonable accommodations may also include 

the modification of rules or policies such as permitting a disabled 

tenant to have a two-bedroom unit to accommodate a resident assistant or 

to permit a disabled tenant to have a companion animal. The decision 

whether the requested accommodation is reasonable or unreasonable or 

whether to provide the accommodation would cause an undue financial or 

administrative burden lies with the borrower and would be for the 

borrower to defend should a complaint subsequently be filed. Borrowers 

may wish to consult with their legal counsel



[[Page 510]]



prior to denying a request. If the borrower takes the position that 

providing an accommodation would cause an undue financial or 

administrative burden, the borrower must permit the tenant to make 

reasonable modifications at the tenant's expense. Requests for 

reasonable accommodations must be handled in accordance with the 

management plan.

    (d) Housing sign requirements. (1) A permanent sign identifying the 

housing project is required for all housing projects approved on or 

after September 13, 1977. Permanent signs are recommended for all 

housing projects approved prior to September 13, 1977. The sign must 

meet the following requirements:

    (i) Must be located at the primary site entrance and be readable and 

recognizable from the roadside;

    (ii) Must be located near the site manager's office when the housing 

project has multiple sites and portable signs must be placed where 

vacancies exist at other site locations of a ``scattered site'' housing 

project;

    (iii) May be of any shape;

    (iv) Must be not less than 16 square feet of area for housing 

projects with 8 or more rental units (smaller housing projects may have 

smaller signs);

    (v) Must be made of durable material including its supports;

    (vi) Must include the housing project name;

    (vii) Must show rental contact information including but not limited 

to the office location of the housing project and a telephone number 

where applicant inquiries may be made;

    (viii) Must show either the equal housing opportunity logotype (the 

house and equal sign, with the words equal housing opportunity 

underneath the house); the equal housing opportunity slogan ``equal 

housing opportunity''; or the equal housing opportunity statement, ``We 

are pledged to the letter and spirit of U.S. policy for the achievement 

of equal housing opportunity throughout the nation. We encourage and 

support an affirmative advertising and marketing program in which there 

are no barriers to obtaining housing because of race, color, religion, 

sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin.'' If the logotype is 

used, the size of the logo must be no less than 5 percent of the total 

size of the project sign.

    (ix) May display the Agency or Department logotype; and

    (x) Must comply with state and local codes.

    (2) Accessible parking spaces must be reserved for individuals with 

disabilities by a sign showing the international symbol of 

accessibility. The sign must be mounted on a post at a height that is 

readily visible from an occupied vehicle. In snow areas, the sign must 

be visible above piled snow. If there is an office, the designated 

parking space must be van accessible.

    (3) When the continuous unobstructed ingress or egress disabled 

accessibility route to a primary building entrance is other than the 

usual or obvious route, the alternate route for disabled accessibility 

must be clearly marked with international accessibility symbols and 

directional signs to aid a disabled person's ingress or egress to the 

building, through an accessible entrance, and to the accessible common 

use and public and living areas.