No, because your a leach on the working upstanding citizens that you take advantage of. Karma.
Yes.
A section 8 voucher has no impact on the rules of the lease or state laws concerning tenancy. However, if a state allows "self-help" evictions, federal rules override such rules and require that a tenant on Section 8 can only be evicted by judicial action.
Yes they can.
Check in with your local housing program to see if you are still eligible to do so.
It is possible to regain your Section 8 voucher after being evicted, but this typically depends on the circumstances of the eviction and the policies of the housing authority. You may need to work with your housing authority to address the eviction and demonstrate that you are now in stable housing in order to have your voucher reinstated.
If you weren't on Section 8 when you were evicted, yes. If you were on Section 8 (now known as the Housing Choice Voucher Program) and were evicted because of violation of lease or non-payment of rent, you could lose your voucher, something that your Housing Program Coordinator and his supervisor can decide on a case-by-case basis. Let's clarify that an eviction is not a simple note by the landlord asking you to move: it's a court proceeding petitioni9ng a judge or magistrate to force you to move out.
It may be that the Housing Autority cancelled the Section 8 contract because of the tenant's breach. In that case, yes, the tenant is simply responsible for all of the rent, and if the tenant does not pay, the landlord should move forward with eviction. But, there is federal regulation saying that the tenant cannot be evicted if the Housing Authority simply stopped paying for some reason that has nothing to do with the tenant, like the housing authoriy's error, or budget problems.
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Since this is in the illegal drugs section, you are never allowed.....because the drugs in question are illigal. Hence, the illegal drugs section.
You certainly could. Many people would say that you should not. If you do, there is an administrative procedure within the housing authority to appeal the revocation. If that does work, you can appeal to a court.
You have violated the terms of your lease and you will be evicted. If the person living in the unit was the person being abused, they will be allowed to stay in the unit and receive protection under the violence against women act.