Saturday, May 28, 2011

[epilepsy] Re: landlord discrimination & sad update

 

Hi!

I want to stay since it's my right and I've done nothing wrong. Also, this is close to many things I need and I don't drive. Their actions are shameful and I've been told that I am sticking up for others who maybe haven't in the past.

I recently learned of another person who moved in here who was told that the management came to his door and told him that he couldn't have guests (which is ridiculous). Even worse: a statement about how they didn't like some he had visiting because she was "of a mixed race". Discriminatory statements again. Just terrible.

This is a place for independent people, but some of the much older tenants aren't fully independent. As one attorney said, if they have concerns about cleaning up after me, they need to hire a cleaning service to do so.

I'm on a different medicine and I haven't had any major episode for a year or so. Panic attacks and anxiety, yes, but not the major losses of consciousness.

You and I are allowed to stay where we are. A medical condition is not one of the permissible reasons a landlord could evict a person. As a citizen with a disability, we have rights. Oh, how I hope that nothing I'm going through happens to you! If your landlord just writes they don't like your seizures and won't renew the lease and the HUD agrees with it, it's wrong for both parties.

So, I'm not through and I'll appeal. It'll be tough (scary) to represent myself in court, but I can be up for it. The Division On Civil Rights did a bad job giving me all of the information they had, too, and so I wasn't even given a chance to respond to some things that the management said.

I've stayed up really late, and it's 5:54 in the morn right now, writing to the governor, attorney general, the person who investigated my complain, the director of that division, and already started the appeal process (online, just asking an official place for more information about it).

By definition, even attempting to not renew a lease because of a medical condition has to constitute discrimination. It looks like I'm not through yet. I'm shocked at the Division's lack of understanding here and that they didn't give me everything I needed to respond.

--- In epilepsy@yahoogroups.com, "Millie Myers" <mylmy@...> wrote:
>
> Brian,
>
> I've been wondering all this time why you want to live where you are not wanted.
> It certainly can't be easy to live there. Have you checked into other places to
> rent?
>
> Is the facility you live in for people who are independent? If I remember correctly
> when this all started -- you mentioned that they needed to clean up for you after a sz.
> If this is the case -- that is not independent. I can see how you could still be independent
> if after a sz you have someone to call to be with you or clean up or whatever.
>
> This has got to be difficult to live there. Are you having more szs because of the stress?
>
> I live in an independent building and when I have a sz my daughters are called. But if the
> facility had to clean up after I left for the hospital-- I don't think I could stay here. I live in
> a HUD building.
>
> Millie

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