Every case has different facts, but residents in the Pittsburgh-area region often report patterns like these:
1) Wet-deck falls during busy gatherings
Guests come and go, kids run ahead, and someone steps onto a surface slick from splashing, algae, or poor drainage. If the deck coping was uneven, tiles were loose, or the area wasn’t treated/maintained, liability may hinge on whether hazards were preventable and should have been addressed.
2) Barrier or gate problems that allow unsafe access
A pool area that lacks a reliable barrier—or has a gate that doesn’t latch—can create foreseeable danger. For families, the most important question becomes whether safety features were installed correctly and maintained over time.
3) Drain, suction, or entrapment-type injuries
Serious injuries can involve malfunctioning or improperly configured drain systems, broken covers, or missing safety components. These cases often require technical review because the defense may argue the system was “working as intended.”
4) Chemical imbalance, skin/eye injuries, or breathing problems
Injuries tied to water chemistry can be delayed. People may feel irritation, headaches, coughing, or asthma flare-ups after exposure. We look at whether testing happened on a reasonable schedule, whether readings were within safe parameters, and how quickly problems were corrected.
5) Near-drowning or drowning aftermath
After catastrophic incidents, families need clarity fast—about supervision, emergency response, and whether unsafe conditions contributed to the tragedy.