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All of the Idaho Legal Aid Services' (ILAS) offices may be able to provide the following kinds of help with housing issues:
eviction, 3-day notices
repairs
discrimination
mobile homes
fair housing violations
public housing
In order to be eligible, you must be the following:
a low-income household
a tenant
still living in the residence
Some exceptions are:
Find out about:
Legal Help
Fair Housing
Housing Discrimination
Legal Help
Find the nearest Idaho Legal Aid Services office
To find more information about Idaho laws and ways to help yourself:
If you have a fair housing issue or a predatory lending question, the following resources are available:
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) 1-800-669-9777, or (TDD) 1-800-927-9275, or on the web at www.hud.gov
Intermountain Fair Housing Council (208) 383-0695 in Boise calling area, or statewide toll-free 1-800-717-0695
Before you buy a home, attend a home ownership education course offered by the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)-approved, non-profit counseling agencies.
Interview several real estate professionals (agents), and ask for and check references before you select one to help you buy or sell a home.
Get information about the prices of other homes in the neighborhood. Do not be fooled into paying too much.
Idaho Legal Aid Services' (ILAS) offices provide the following kinds of help with public benefits:
denial or termination of Medicaid, food stamps, Temporary Assistance to Families in Idaho (TAFI), Idaho Child Care Program (ICCP)
denial or termination of Unemployment Compensation Benefits
denial or termination of Social Security
denial or termination of Public Housing Assistance
denial or termination of Title II
In order to be eligible, you must be one of the following:
Legal Help
Find the nearest Idaho Legal Aid Services office
To find more information about Idaho laws and ways to help yourself:
Washington, DC -- Requests by low-income Americans for help with foreclosure and unemployment problems are increasing, officials at the Legal Services Corporation (LSC) said at a House Appropriations Subcommittee hearing today on LSC's budget request for Fiscal Year 2011...
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Renters have rights, but as homes are foreclosed tenants can feel helpless. You should feel empowered, though, because you cannot be pushed around. See the KBOI TV news video here.
By Tami Tremblay - KBOI TV Boise
PDF download available in two parts.
The age of majority is a term used to describe when a child becomes an adult in the eyes of the law, which for many things is 18 years old. This website describes some of what you are able to do now that you are 18.
Remember: turning 18 does not mean you have all the rights and privileges of an adult – some came earlier and some will come later. For example, in Idaho you were able to get a provisional driver’s license when you turned 15, but you can’t buy or consume alcohol until you turn 21.
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