Every pool case turns on the specific safety failures involved. In Snellville, we frequently see patterns tied to how pools are used in suburban settings—especially during weekends, holidays, and community events.
1) Slip-and-fall on the deck or pool edge
Wet deck surfaces, algae, uneven coping, and poor traction can cause serious injuries. We look at lighting conditions, weather patterns (Georgia humidity and storms), and whether the surface condition was something a property owner could reasonably fix.
2) Barrier and gate issues that let children access the pool
Many injuries involve a missing, damaged, or improperly functioning barrier. In practice, these failures are often tied to gates that don’t self-close, latches that stick, or maintenance shortcuts.
3) Drain, suction, or entrapment-type dangers
Entrapment injuries can be catastrophic. We examine the pool’s circulation and safety features—such as drain covers and compliance with applicable safety expectations—along with maintenance records showing whether required safeguards were intact.
4) Water chemistry problems after delayed testing or poor maintenance
Unsafe water can worsen rashes, eye injuries, asthma symptoms, or respiratory distress. We investigate testing frequency, logs, repair invoices, and whether abnormal readings were addressed promptly.
5) Near-drowning incidents and supervision gaps
In the most serious cases, the key questions are what was known, what supervision was provided, and whether the environment and safeguards reduced (or increased) risk.