In suburban communities like New Franklin, many pools are maintained by homeowners, property managers, HOA staff, or outside service companies. The cases that tend to move forward are the ones where the injured family can show the dangerous condition was preventable—and that the responsible party either knew about it or should have discovered it with reasonable upkeep.
Local patterns we see in pool injury claims commonly include:
- Wet-deck slip hazards from algae, worn anti-slip surfaces, or poor drainage after summer storms
- Barrier/gate problems at shared properties or rentals (self-latching failures, gaps too wide, worn hinges)
- Broken or unstable access such as cracked coping, unsafe ladders, or uneven steps
- Water chemistry/chemical handling issues that cause burns or respiratory irritation—especially when storage, ventilation, or mixing practices aren’t followed
These aren’t “random accidents.” They’re often the result of maintenance gaps, incomplete inspections, or safety features that weren’t properly installed or kept in working order.


