Fair Housing Council of Riverside County, Inc. (FHCRC) is a non-profit organization established in 1986 and approved by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The organization operates as a civil rights advocate focused on protecting housing rights across Riverside County. It works directly with government offices to ensure fair housing laws are upheld and investigates unlawful housing discrimination across protected classes including race, color, national origin, religion, age, sex, familial status, disability, sexual orientation, and source of income.
FHCRC offers a comprehensive range of free housing services beyond anti-discrimination work. These include landlord-tenant dispute resolution, first-time homebuyer workshops and pre-purchase consulting, credit counseling, foreclosure prevention assistance, and community training programs. The organization provides Know Your Rights educational materials in English and Spanish, counsels tenants on eviction prevention, and maintains active resources addressing housing-related public health concerns. Their testing coordinators investigate potential discrimination cases, and they organize annual housing conferences and community events.
The organization distinguishes itself through direct HUD approval and long-term community commitment spanning nearly 40 years. Client testimonials highlight their intervention effectiveness—one case involved recovering a full security deposit after the council intervened with a property manager regarding unsafe housing conditions. The organization employs named counselors (Craig, Juanita) who provide personalized case resolution. They maintain robust Spanish-language resources reflecting the bilingual service area. The council's work extends into community institution-building, as evidenced by the organization's role in establishing the Civil Rights Institute of Inland Southern California.
FHCRC is fundamentally a non-profit advocacy and counseling organization, not a financial services provider. They do not offer credit repair, credit building tools, loans, or credit monitoring products. Their services are appropriate only for housing-related issues—discrimination, landlord disputes, homebuyer preparation, and foreclosure situations. Consumers seeking traditional credit or financial products should look elsewhere.