In New Providence, many pools are part of owner-occupied residences, homeowner communities, or managed properties. That matters because the “who’s responsible” question can shift depending on:
- Whether the pool is privately maintained by a homeowner versus managed by a third-party service
- Whether repairs were requested (and ignored) before the accident
- Whether safety equipment—like self-latching gates, alarms, covers, or signage—was actually in place and functioning
- Seasonal patterns: summer gatherings can create crowded pool decks, higher foot traffic, and more opportunities for hazards to go unnoticed
A fast, evidence-focused approach is especially important in the first days after a pool incident, because maintenance logs, surveillance, and vendor records may be overwritten, lost, or “cleaned up” before you ever see them.


