After a pool injury, the most important actions are often the least “legal-sounding.” They’re also the ones that get harder once time passes.
- Get medical care immediately (even if symptoms seem minor). Pool incidents can involve head injuries, cuts/infections, respiratory irritation, or delayed effects after near-drowning.
- Ask for incident documentation. If the pool is managed by a property manager, HOAs, or a rental company, request the accident report and any logs related to the pool’s operation.
- Preserve the scene. If it’s safe, take photos or video of the deck surface, ladder/handrails, gates, locks, signage, pool equipment, and any visible damage.
- Preserve water and maintenance records. In Washington, details matter—water testing schedules, filter/drain maintenance, and repair invoices can become central to proving notice and negligence.
- Be careful with statements to insurers. Early recorded statements can be used to narrow the claim. It’s often better to let counsel review how facts are presented.
In many Marysville-area cases, the hardest evidence to recover later is video footage and maintenance documentation—especially when a property changes hands, schedules shift, or records are overwritten.


