The ruling casts doubt on similar law in Virginia.
by Hans Bader

Virginia attorney general Jay Jones is being sued over a Virginia law that bans landlords from discriminating against people who use federal housing vouchers to pay their rent. Landlords often donโt like accepting those vouchers because they have to waive their Fourth Amendment privacy rights against warrantless inspections and deal with burdensome government red tape.
Requiring landlords to accept Section 8 vouchers is unconstitutional. A state appeals court in New York has reluctantly struck down a similar law in New York state, finding it violates the Fourth Amendment. The New York Times reports:
A New York State appeals court on Thursday invalidated a key protection for low-income tenants, ruling that a state law that bars landlords from discriminating against people who use federal housing vouchers to pay rent is unconstitutional.
The unanimous ruling, by a five-judge panel of the Appellate Divisionโs Third Judicial Department, acknowledged that the goal of the law was โlaudableโโฆBut the court sided with the landlord who had appealed the case, asserting that requiring him to accept vouchers under the federal program commonly known as Section 8 violated his constitutional rights.
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