DC Office of Human Rights — The Office of Human Rights (OHR) enforces the District of Columbia Human Rights Act from 441 4th Street NW, Suite 570N, Washington, DC 20001, handling discrimination complaints, outreach, and mediation programs across protected traits in housing, employment, public accommodations, and educational institutions. Filings, deadlines, and evidentiary rules are authoritative only on ohr.dc.gov.
How we sourced this listing
Professional Business Directory prepares these pages using at least five categories of public evidence per our editorial workflow: the organization’s official web presence, regulator and government references where applicable, industry-standard classifications, mapping and NAP desk checks, and reputable secondary coverage when it adds dated facts. We do not copy other directories verbatim. Fees, staff, and hours change; use this entry as an orientation layer and confirm material details directly with the business before you rely on them for money, legal, or safety decisions.
What this office covers
- Intake: civil rights complaints within DC jurisdiction per published procedures.
- Education: trainings for employers, landlords, and agencies on compliance.
- Policy: participates in rulemaking and public guidance updates with the Council and Mayor’s offices.
Business context
- Government actor: DC agency—employees are public servants subject to open-government laws.
- Reach: matters tied to DC-covered entities; federal claims may belong elsewhere.
- Hours: confirm visitor and phone-tree hours before travel.
Languages & accessibility
OHR provides language access services for covered processes per DC policy; call +1 202-727-4559 to request interpretation. Federal-style building security; ask about ADA entry.
Location & contact
- Address: 441 4th St NW #570N, Washington, DC 20001, United States
- Phone: +1 202-727-4559
- Website: ohr.dc.gov
Last verified (desk review): April 2026 — NAP matched; mission from OHR’s public About pages; upgraded website to HTTPS.
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1 Review on “Office of Human Rights of the District of Columbia”
I had to file a discrimination complaint and was honestly nervous about the process. The staff at the Office of Human Rights were professional, patient, and explained every step clearly. They made a stressful situation feel manageable. I appreciated how organized and respectful everyone was.