Troy’s neighborhoods include both single-family properties and shared amenities in multi-unit buildings. That mix can change who had control of the pool area at the time of the incident.
Common Troy-area situations we see include:
- Seasonal gatherings with lots of foot traffic (family visits, neighborhood parties, holiday cookouts) where wet decks and crowded pool edges become high-risk areas.
- Shared pools in rentals or community setups where maintenance may be handled by a property manager or vendor—not the individual tenant.
- Older pool decks and walkways where coping, tiles, ladders, and handrails may show wear that isn’t obvious until someone steps on it.
These details matter because liability often turns on control, notice, and whether reasonable safety measures were maintained for foreseeable users.


