Frank Suriano provides real estate services in compliance with federal, New York State, and New York City fair housing laws. Service is offered without discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, disability, familial status, national origin, marital status, age, military status, lawful source of income, immigration or citizenship status, or any other class protected by law.
Equal service
Fair housing applies to advertising, property access, showings, referrals, negotiation, communications, and all housing-related services. Frank will not steer clients toward or away from a neighborhood, misrepresent availability, set different terms, or follow a seller, landlord, buyer, or third-party preference that conflicts with fair housing law.
Required notices
The official New York State Fair Housing Notice and Compass's New York Standard Operating Procedures are available for review. If you believe you have experienced housing discrimination, contact the appropriate agency, the Department of State, the New York State Division of Human Rights, the New York City Commission on Human Rights, HUD, or a qualified attorney.
Last updated: May 26, 2026.
How this shows up in practice
Equal service is more than a posted notice. It affects how search criteria are discussed, how listings are presented, how questions are answered, and how clients are treated from first conversation through closing. The same standards apply whether someone is early in a search, preparing to list, comparing neighborhoods, or asking for a second opinion on a specific property.
When a question touches protected classes, school boundaries, building rules, financing, or neighborhood character, the conversation stays grounded in verified facts, client-directed preferences, and public resources. The goal is to help people make informed decisions without steering, assumptions, or selective access to information.
Practical guidance can still be specific. A client can ask about commute options, building policies, comparable sales, documented amenities, public records, or due-diligence steps, and the response should point back to sources and choices the client controls. That keeps the conversation useful while respecting the boundaries required for fair treatment.