In Moncks Corner, pool use often intensifies around warm-weather weekends, family events, and community activities. That pattern matters legally because it affects what hazards are foreseeable and what safety steps a property owner or operator should have in place.
Common situations we see after local pool incidents include:
- Deck and walkway surfaces made slippery by water, sunscreen, or algae growth
- Guests walking barefoot or running near the pool during busy events
- Children accessing the pool area without an effective barrier or supervision
- Pool equipment left in a state that increases risk (unsafe ladders, poorly secured gates, malfunctioning drains)
- Delays in addressing known problems—like a gate that doesn’t latch or a deck crack that’s been reported
When insurers later claim “we didn’t know,” the timeline usually becomes the fight. Early documentation is often what determines whether the responsible party had notice.


