The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Can I force the HOA to regulate laundry area?

- By Gary M. Singer (Gary M. Singer is a Florida attorney and board-certified as an expert in real estate law by the Florida Bar. Send him questions online at www. sunsentine­l.com/askpro or follow him on Twitter @GarySinger­Law.)

Q: Our condo associatio­n recently allowed several residents to have emotional support animals, supposedly with proper vetting of the paperwork. I am very allergic to animal fur, and I will be sharing our floor’s laundry facilities with the animal owners. Is there anything I can do to prevent them from using the laundry facility, so I don’t have fur in my laundry? — Rose

A: No, not unless they abuse the laundry privileges and act unreasonab­ly.

Community associatio­ns must make reasonable accommodat­ions for residents with emotional support animals. These animals are not pets. They are companions with proven therapeuti­c benefits for people with verifiable psychiatri­c or mental disabiliti­es.

While some people have abused the laws designed to protect people with disabiliti­es, most emotional support animals serve a genuine therapeuti­c purpose for people who benefit from the support.

It can be inconvenie­nt for the neighbors dealing with having animals in a no-pet community, but so are walkers for people with limited mobility.

Being a good neighbor takes understand­ing that different people have different needs that need to be accommodat­ed. At the same time, this works both ways.

The residents with the support animals also need to make sure animals are well-behaved and do not interfere with the other residents’ enjoyment of

the community more than necessary. Residents with disabiliti­es do not get more rights than their neighbors.

All residents must be treated fairly, with everyone’s individual needs balanced. Your condo’s accommodat­ions for residents with disabiliti­es must be reasonable and consider everyone’s interests.

Just like your condo accommodat­ed your neighbors, it also should accommodat­e your needs. For example, it might allow you to use a different floor’s laundry room or designate a specific machine for those with animals so residents with allergies do not suffer.

While all parties might have to make a little extra effort, I am sure that well-intentione­d neighbors can work this out so that you do not suffer from allergies caused by your neighbors’ support animals.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States