There is a federal law called VAWA that helps if you or a household member are a victim of domestic violence or sexual assault and apply for or live in:
- Public Housing
- Subsidized Housing
- Section 8 Voucher Programs
- USDA Rural Housing or
- Low Income Housing Tax Credit (Section 42)
VAWA stands for the Violence Against Women Act. It says that a housing program can’t turn you down for housing, terminate your lease, or evict you because of your abuser’s or attacker’s actions against you or a household member. Housing programs had until June 14, 2017, to put an emergency transfer policy in place. This transfer policy is for victims of domestic violence or sexual assault who need to move for safety if another unit is available.
Domestic violence can be violence against you or a household member, dating violence and stalking. The housing agency or landlord can ask you to prove the domestic violence or sexual assault. They may end the lease for the abuser or attacker and keep renting just to you.
This law does not mean that the housing agency or landlord can’t enforce other housing program rules or other terms of the lease. You can be evicted for something else that violates the rules or your lease.