THE BOTTOM LINE New York’s ruling does not end source-of-income protections or invalidate the Section 8 program. But it does raise a serious constitutional question about mandatory voucher acceptance. For New York, the immediate issue is the tension between source-of-income protections and Fourth Amendment concerns. For other states, the ruling is not a command. It is a caution sign.
LESLIE TUCKER, ESQ. Principal Partner Williams Edelstein, Tucker, P.C.
Leslie is the Principal Partner of Williams Edelstein, Tucker, P.C., a fair housing defense law firm, and serves as the Assistant Vice President at the Fair Housing Institute. With a career dedicated to defending housing providers across the country, Leslie offers over a decade of expertise in fair housing matters. Leslie represents her clients in administrative fair housing cases, assists with drafting and updating company policies, consults on day-to-day fair housing-related decisions, and provides live training sessions on fair housing laws, federal housing programs, and landlord-tenant issues. Additionally, she is an expert in physical accessibility standards for multifamily housing, encompassing both local building codes and federal requirements like the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Fair Housing Act (FHAAG). Leslie has been actively involved in consulting and training with the Fair Housing Institute since 2021.
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