Rental protections are essential to a survivor's housing security and an important part of their long-term safety. Rental protections include the ability to terminate a lease early without penalties and omit credit scores on rental applications.
POSITIVE POLICIES THIS STATE HAS
Survivors are eligible to terminate a lease early
Early lease termination does not result in any penalties including future rent, deduction of deposits or other costs
Early lease termination eligibility remains in place regardless of whether a known harm-doer is list on the rental lease agreement
Survivors can omit their credit scores on rental applications
Landlords are prohibited from evicting someone based on incidents of intimate partner violence
Landlords are prohibited from discriminating against survivors who are rental applicants or tenants
Survivors are not responsible for property damage as a result of intimate partner violence
Eviction protections remain in place regardless of whether a known harm-doer has entered the property and/or rental unit
Landlords are held liable to the tenant for any damages as a result of violating rental protections stated in the law
Survivors are not required to prove that they have experienced intimate partner violence to access protections, or can access them with a sworn statement from either the survivor or a qualified third party that intimate partner violence occurred
ADVERSE POLICIES THIS STATE HAS
Survivors are required to produce a protective order or police report proving intimate partner violence occurred to access protections
Frequent calls to law enforcement or complaints related to IPV incidences label a property as a “public nuisance”
POSITIVE POLICIES THIS STATE SHOULD ADOPT
This state does not have policies in this section.
ADVERSE POLICIES THIS STATE SHOULD AVOID
This state does not have policies in this section.