Pool accidents aren’t always dramatic in the moment. Many are preventable safety failures—sometimes involving multiple issues at once.
1) Slip-and-fall on wet decks near busy residential pools
Knoxville neighborhoods often have shared pool areas with concrete walkways, poolside ladders, and textured surfaces. We frequently see claims involving:
- inadequate traction treatment on pool decks,
- uneven coping or cracked tile,
- poor lighting at early morning or evening hours,
- failure to address known hazards after prior complaints.
2) Barrier and gate failures in HOAs and rental properties
A common Knoxville pattern is shared responsibility. In some communities, maintenance is handled by a management company, while the property owner retains ultimate control. In rentals, repairs may be outsourced.
When a child gains access, or a gate doesn’t self-latch, the key question becomes whether the barrier system was installed, inspected, and maintained according to reasonable safety practices.
3) Suction entrapment and unsafe pool equipment
Modern pools can still present serious risks when drains, covers, and circulation systems are not functioning properly. After an incident, we focus on:
- the type and condition of the drain cover,
- whether safety features were operational,
- whether routine inspections were documented.
4) Unsafe water chemistry or chemical exposure during Knoxville summer use
Pools in use all summer require consistent testing. If chemical levels are off—especially in enclosed or poorly ventilated setups—people can suffer burns, respiratory irritation, and worsening medical symptoms.
We look at water testing records, timing of treatments, and whether abnormal readings were addressed quickly.
5) Drowning and near-drowning incidents during events and busy weekends
Knoxville families know how quickly a backyard gathering can change. Near-drowning cases often require immediate attention to both medical causation and supervision/safety practices.
Even when emergency response was fast, we investigate whether preventable hazards contributed to the emergency.