This is rather touchy, because a landlord cannot be a relative of the tenant except under certain circumstances where the tenant is disabled
Yes.
There is no obligation for a landlord to take Section 8.
There is no such thing as a Section 8 Landlord. There are either public housing developments and apartments, or there are landlords who are willing to participate in the Housing Choice Voucher Program (I.e., accept section 8 vouchers).
can you get section 8 for an apartment you are all ready rent but can no longer pay for landlord wants information for section 8 for renters and how you can get it.
This depends on the complaint you have against him, whether the Landlord has a boss, and if the landlord takes Section 8 or owns a complex that is under a federal loan or tax credit. If the landlord is an individual landlord he is subject to code rules of the municipality of the rental unit. If the complaint is about discriminatory issues you can complain to HUD. If he takes Section 8 you can complain to your Section 8 specialist.
No.
It depends on the state. In California, a landlord has no obligation to rent under Section 8. If you are saying you are currently in a lease and you want to continue renting but under a Section 8 lease, it would again depend on the state.
Section 8 usually does not allow renting out of rooms within the same house.
No. Not in Arkansas You do have to apply to the local housing authority to become eligible to rent as Section 8
It is relatively to to become a section 8 landlord. You can apply to through your local HUD housing authority or apply through a section 8 participant.
The landlord can demand rent when it is due. Depending on the jurisdiction, they may not be able to take legal action until after 3 days but it is due when the lease says it is due. If Section 8 has not promised to pay on the due date you have in mind, it's the tenant's responsibility.
You can only lose your section 8 voucher if you violate the terms of your lease, the landlord files eviction proceedings against you, and wins a judgment against you for eviction.
In most states YES, but in some states NO. Check with your state.