Home group housing policy

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Overview

Although there is not a specific legal definition of a "group home," the term has come to commonly refer to group residential environments for people with mental or physical disabilities.

The increasing number of group homes seeking locations in residential areas has been controversial, as have municipal attempts to regulate their location. As a result, federal and state laws have attempted to address the discrimination these homes have experienced, primarily in urban settings.

For a helpful overview of the legal issues involving the siting and regulation of group homes, see this article by Ted Gathe, former city attorney of Vancouver, Regulating Group Homes in the Twenty First Century: The Limits of Municipal Authority (2013).

Statutes

No [city/county] may enact or maintain an ordinance, development regulation, zoning regulation or official control, policy, or administrative practice which treats a residential structure occupied by persons with handicaps differently than a similar residential structure occupied by a family or other unrelated individuals. As used in this section, "handicaps" are as defined in the federal fair housing amendments act of 1988 (42 U.S.C. Sec. 3602).

An adult family home must be considered a residential use of property for zoning and public and private utility rate purposes. Adult family homes are a permitted use in all areas zoned for residential or commercial purposes, including areas zoned for single-family dwellings.

Examples of Codes