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The general rule is no, unless the renter is disabled and a family member has a dwelling that is specifically suited for the disabled renter. A family member would be: parents/grandparents, siblings, parent's siblings (aunt and uncle), nieces and nephews.
Katy Price= Harvey
Section 8 housing rules typically allow a primary leaseholder, their dependents, and any other household members listed on the lease to live in the unit. Guests can stay for short periods but must not exceed the program's limits on occupancy. Any changes in household composition should be reported to the housing authority.
How could i file a judgement against a family member. I co-signed for a school loan for this family member and she is not paying the bill.
just get a family member to go.
The problem is that a reference from a family member doesn't count.
Certainly they can.
Yes. But the abandoned child's caregiver can ask the Family Court to consider the child's emotional safety and give them custody of the minor.
Under federal law family members cannot rent out their property to tenants on section 8 because of the potential for fraud. If the family member is severely disabled and is dependent upon the potential family landlord, they can apply for an exception.
No you can not unless that relative has a disability and that the rental unit is specialized for that tenant's disability.
no. there are laws against it.
No. As long as you're not a supervisor and your employee is a family member to prevent claims or preferential treatment. If it's a problem, they can separate family members into different stores. You just can't supervise a family member