| Re: Senior Housing [was Reaction to Adawehi webinar | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
|
From: Thomas Chapel (tjchapel |
|
| Date: Fri, 27 Feb 2026 11:41:18 -0800 (PST) | |
Ah--thanks Tom Chapel On Fri, Feb 27, 2026 at 2:34 PM Sharon Villines via Cohousing-L < cohousing-l [at] cohousing.org> wrote: > > On Feb 26, 2026, at 10:34 AM, Thomas Chapel via Cohousing-L < > cohousing-l [at] cohousing.org> wrote: > > > > Hmm. Guess i was thinking age is a protected class. BUT on other hand how > > do senior communities prohibit folks under 55? Or cruises or resorts that > > ban kids. Not sure. > > These are specific regulations. From Perplexity: > > > Senior housing communities with lower age limits of 55-60 are primarily > regulated under federal U.S. law through exemptions to the Fair Housing Act > (FHA), allowing age restrictions that would otherwise be discriminatory. > These exemptions come from the Housing for Older Persons Act (HOPA) of > 1995, overseen by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development > (HUD). > > > > HOPA permits three main types: 55+ communities (at least 80% of units > with one resident 55+), 62+ communities (all residents 62+), and > state/federally funded elderly housing. > > > > For 55+ housing, communities must publish policies showing intent for > older persons housing, verify resident ages every two years via IDs or > affidavits, and adhere to the 80/20 occupancy rule. Limits around 55-60 > often align with 55+ standards, as 60 is not a federal threshold but may > appear in community rules or local variations. > > > > Key Requirements > > • Occupancy: 80% of units need at least one 55+ resident; the other > 20% offers flexibility but typically excludes those under 18-19. > > • Verification: Ongoing age checks ensure compliance. > > • Exceptions: Spouses/partners under the limit or caregivers may > reside with qualifiers. > > Having this legal designation allows villages to avoid residential > requirements designed to protect or provide facilities for children under > 18-19. Many communities allow younger children to visit or stay during > school vacations but there are often time limits on such stays. Communities > can set their own exceptions. And the 80/20 rule allows exceptions for ages > 20-55. > > (I’m working on writing comparisons between the senior village I live in > and the cohousing community I lived in, but my sense of things keeps > changing and I keep rewriting.) > > One thing that is not true is that there are no children in senior > villages. There are frequent parties or other celebrations when children > attend with grandparents, etc. Children often visit regularly. The > Christmas party here had so many children that people couldn’t get in the > door. I often see teens having lunch with elders. I asked one woman about > her frequent 16-17 year old guests and discovered that she taught in a > close-by Catholic school and the students still visit. > > The staff is also filled with high school and junior college students. > There is a strong attitude that interactions are supportive and educational > rather than complaining or correcting. (The interactions provide a lot of > humor as well.)The residents raise money all year for scholarships. During > the recent almost-blizzard, we housed 300 staff members at Riderwood or > nearby hotels because they couldn’t get home if they did, might not get > back. > > The evening dining hours are early because people are concerned that > students need to get home on school nights, for example, so the family > concerns of the community also affects senior communities. > > And also the age spread between 55 and 109 is as large as the spread from > 0 to 54. My floor has an open dinner invitation on Mondays to eat together > in the dining room, no rsvp required. We take a head count when we are > ready to sit down to determine what size table we need. The age range is > such that I often feel like the child at the table. The 98 year old lady at > the end of my hall is a real lady — full makeup and serious dress. Dramatic > hair. She also keeps fresh flowers on the shelf at the end of the hall, > like the ladies who contribute flowers perpetually to museums and the > medians in wide avenues. She doesn’t eat desserts. At almost every meal she > offers me her cookies as if I am her grandchild. Not to say that she treats > me like a child, it just feels that way to me. The other people have also > lived here 5-20 years so they also know much more than I do. It’s a whole > new view of the world — instead of oldest at 83, I’m among the youngest. > > Sharon > ---- > Sharon Villines > Riderwood Village, Silver Spring MD > Founding member for 25 years, Takoma Village, Washington DC > > _________________________________________________________________ > Cohousing-L mailing list -- Unsubscribe, archives and other info at: > http://L.cohousing.org/info > > > >
- Re: Reaction to Adawehi webinar, (continued)
- Re: Reaction to Adawehi webinar Sharon Villines, February 27 2026
- Re: Reaction to Adawehi webinar Thomas Chapel, February 27 2026
- Re: Reaction to Adawehi webinar Deborah Nagle-Burks, February 27 2026
- Re: Senior Housing [was Reaction to Adawehi webinar Sharon Villines, February 27 2026
- Re: Senior Housing [was Reaction to Adawehi webinar Thomas Chapel, February 27 2026
Results generated by Tiger Technologies Web hosting using MHonArc.