Let's say you have two cats and you'd rather go homeless than them.

I'm not even sure it would open up my search to include anywhere I'd be able to afford.

  • Zoift [he/him]
    hexbear
    16
    5 months ago

    Depends how brushed up on the ADA the landleech in question is. Registered Service Animals have protections under federal law, but ESAs don't.

    Most people dont know the difference and it's 100% legal to make a very Official Looking document stating your cats are Medically Nessicary ESAs and imply they really shouldn't discriminate over such matters without a lawyer.

    I've gotten my cat (and my ex-roomate her malamute) into a couple of different apartments run by large managment companies this way. The leasing agents at the desk arent paid enough to deal with it.

    • AntiOutsideAktion [he/him]
      hexagon
      hexbear
      9
      edit-2
      5 months ago

      It seems like California gives ESAs more legal weight than national law https://calcivilrights.ca.gov/wp-content/uploads/sites/32/2022/12/Emotional-Support-Animals-and-Fair-Housing-Law-FAQ_ENG.pdf

      So I guess it's okay to try? I'm honestly terrified of doing anything what with my whole 'hanging on by a thread' deal lately. Do you keep it under your hat until you get a lease and then spring them on the landlord or do you bring it up while you're applying? I imagine it doesn't work so well when the 'apartment' is a bed+bath combo in some suburban house

      • Zoift [he/him]
        hexbear
        8
        5 months ago

        Absolutely try, worst that can happen is they say no. Bring it up early, you have nothing to hide after all! Have an air of 'I'm used to questions about my Very Legal animal, my apologies, let me clear this up'

        • AntiOutsideAktion [he/him]
          hexagon
          hexbear
          4
          5 months ago

          The only problem I have with this is I gotta get into a new place =NOW=. I won't dramapost here but I'm living in a hotel room that if I try to keep up with the rent for another month I'll be homeless, and I've been working at an amazon for a month and the month of december is the only 'proof of income' paystubs I'll get anywhere with it looks like... so I basically have a two week window to trick a landlord into taking me. And then I'll get to live to fight another day to find a job that won't cut my hours to nothing after they use me up for a rush.

          • Zoift [he/him]
            hexbear
            4
            5 months ago

            Ahhh, i see. Sorry you're having to go through all this comrade. Looking at your link, i think you should be ok with disclosing it with a copy of the relavent statutes and forging the equivalent of an ESA Dr's note. Seems Cali has pretty loose requirements for ESAs.

            That being said, if it gets a roof over your head, lie to the fuckers. You & yours having shelter matter more than hypothetical a lease violation later.

    • ClimateCollapse [none/use name]
      hexbear
      5
      5 months ago

      Registered Service Animals have protections under federal law, but ESAs don't.

      ESAs are covered under the Fair Housing Act. They don’t have as many protections as registered service animals but they do have federal protections.

  • TheWorldSpins [any, undecided]
    hexbear
    15
    5 months ago

    My lease requires 24 hours notice before inspections or etc, so I just ask a friend to watch my dog for a bit. If you have a room mate maybe you can crate them and give them a nice car ride until management is gone?

  • JohnBrownsBussy2 [he/him]
    hexbear
    8
    5 months ago

    I know friends who have gotten away with this with a letter from a counselor or therapist.

  • DayOfDoom [any, any]
    hexbear
    7
    5 months ago

    No way a landlord that already has banned pets is going to allow emotional pets.

    • pixelghost [any]
      hexbear
      1
      edit-2
      5 months ago

      In many places they legally have to allow it so long as OP has paperwork ("paperwork" essentially being a signed note from a health professional lol). Edit: Wait I just noticed you were making a joke. I'm dumb.

  • dragongloss [she/her, they/them]
    hexbear
    3
    5 months ago

    I've never paid a pet fee and I've done it at every apartment I've ever lived at. I've lived in probably 8 different apartments over the course of 15 years. It is incredibly easy.

  • LanyrdSkynrd [he/him]
    hexbear
    3
    5 months ago

    If I was in your situation I would lie and say I didn't have a pet, sign the lease and smuggle them in. Put their crates inside cardboard boxes to carry them in. Then after a few weeks approach management and try to get permission to bring your emotional support cats in.

    Worse case scenario you've bought yourself some time to save up to find a better place. Just make sure that if they find out to start looking for a place as soon as they give you notice to move because it's super hard to find an apartment with an open eviction case. Look into your state's laws, most states they require longer notice periods when the eviction isn't for non-payment of rent.

    Normally I'd say be honest from the start so you can find a landlord that will accept them, but it seems like you're in a tough situation right now.

  • ClimateCollapse [none/use name]
    hexbear
    2
    5 months ago

    Absolutely possible, I’ve done it multiple times. Get a letter from your psychiatrist/other doctor, sign lease, give letter to landlord after lease has been signed.

    Letter should say you need an animal to help your condition (shouldn’t have to specify the condition) and ideally should name the law that requires they allow it, the Fair Housing Act (depending on your state there may also be a relevant state law.

    They’re not allowed to prohibit pets or charge pet rent or pet “deposits” (pet deposits aren’t usually refundable, they’re just fees). You are responsible for the cost of damages your pets do, but that’s always the case.

    May be more difficult for 2 cats, but when you already have one it’s not hard to hide a second one.

  • @InquisitiveApathy@lemm.ee
    hexbear
    1
    edit-2
    5 months ago

    I've had a cat classified as an ESA for about seven years now. My partner has some legitimate anxiety issues and we were given an official notice from a therapist and a second one from a medical doctor that we need to renew every few years. Funny enough we actually only had him classified as an ESA at the suggestion of a leasing agent in the first place to avoid pet rent which has been awesome. We've avoided all pet deposits, extra pet rent, and have had him in "no pets allowed" apartments. Honestly, in the beginning it was as simple as asking our primary doctor for it outright and they wrote a hilariously simple - "I'm a doctor and I recommend this person have an animal" letter. It was genuinely one sentence.

    I have also lived in 4 different states in managed apartment complexes during this period. Some complexes have not given even the slightest fuck and some have called our doctors to verify the legitimacy of the paperwork (HIPPA is a thing and they get told to fuck off if they do😂). It's all going to depend where you're trying to move to and the type of place. In every case we've let the agents know we have an ESA classified animal at lease signing and submitted whatever they've requested.