Claremont is full of family homes, seasonal visitors, and properties where people may be unfamiliar with local safety rules. The most common pool injury patterns we see in the area include:
- Deck and coping hazards: wet surfaces, uneven stone/tile, cracked coping, or algae buildup—often after a storm or during humid summer stretches.
- Barrier and gate failures: pools without reliable self-latching gates or with hardware that doesn’t hold as intended.
- Drain and suction problems: injuries tied to malfunctioning or improperly maintained pool equipment, including safety concerns around water intakes.
- Chemical exposure: skin/eye irritation, respiratory flare-ups, or symptoms that appear after the pool was used while water chemistry was off.
- Visitor-related supervision gaps: injuries where children or guests weren’t supervised in a way that matches posted rules, house expectations, or common-sense safety.
Even when the incident occurs at a private residence, the case may involve more than one party—such as a landlord, property manager, maintenance contractor, or an HOA/community entity.


