Cook County Human Rights Ordinance Ch. 42 and the Illinois Human Rights Act prohibit landlords from refusing tenants based on lawful source of income, including Housing Choice Vouchers, SSI, child support, and other government assistance.
The Cook County Human Rights Ordinance (Ch. 42) lists source of income as a protected class in housing. Refusing to rent to, charging higher rent to, or applying different screening criteria to applicants because they use Housing Choice Vouchers, Social Security, veterans benefits, or other lawful income sources is a violation. The Illinois Human Rights Act (775 ILCS 5) was amended in 2023 to add the same statewide protection. The Cook County Commission on Human Rights investigates complaints, issues cease-and-desist orders, and may impose civil penalties up to $1000 per violation plus actual damages and attorney fees.
Refusing voucher holders, advertising no-Section-8 policies, or imposing higher screening thresholds for assisted tenants leads to civil penalties, damages, and Human Rights Commission enforcement orders.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
Skokie, IL
Aircraft overflight noise in Skokie is regulated by the FAA, not the Village. Skokie lies within the O'Hare International Airport noise corridor, and residen...
Skokie, IL
Skokie restricts lawn equipment use — including gas and electric leaf blowers — to 8:00 AM to 8:00 PM Monday through Saturday and 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM on Sunda...
Skokie, IL
Skokie enforces a village-wide overnight parking ban from 2:00 AM to 6:00 AM on all public streets. Residents and guests must obtain an overnight parking per...
Skokie, IL
Skokie Village Code Chapter 98 prohibits parking recreational vehicles, boats, trailers, and campers on residential streets or in front yards. RVs and boats ...
Skokie, IL
Skokie prohibits parking of commercial vehicles over 8,000 pounds gross weight on residential streets and driveways overnight. Box trucks, semi-tractors, and...
Skokie, IL
Skokie limits residential fences to 4 feet in front yards and 6 feet in side and rear yards. Corner lots have additional sight-line restrictions at intersect...
Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in Cook County.
See how Skokie's source-of-income discrimination rules stack up against other locations.
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