14 playbooks
Safety
Chemical handling, entrapment safety, label compliance, and standards that affect owners.
Barrier Maintenance Checklists
Keep gates, latches, closers, alarms, ladders, and cover access working so the barrier actually behaves like a barrier over time.
Barriers, Gates, and Access Safety
Use gates, fences, alarms, ladders, and cover inspections as active drowning-prevention systems instead of passive accessories.
Can We Swim Right Now?
Check visibility, sanitizer, pH, and physical hazards before anyone gets in.
Chemical Safety and Storage
Read the label first. Store chemicals dry, separate, and out of reach.
Codes and Standards for Pool Owners
Check drain covers, follow labels and manuals, and confirm local code before you touch the equipment.
Commercial vs Residential Contamination
Separate homeowner contamination recovery from public or commercial operator response so the wrong standard is never applied.
Do Not Do This
A failure-pattern library that shows the mistakes that lead to chemical accidents, bad cleanup choices, and avoidable damage.
Electrical and Bonding Owner Checks
Visually inspect GFCIs, conduit, corrosion, bonding lugs, and pad wiring without opening energized panels or guessing at live electrical work.
Emergency Pool Triage Card
A one-screen first response for visible pool emergencies, stop conditions, and owner-versus-pro handoff boundaries.
Know where observation ends and service work begins
Stop at the owner-safe boundary before energized, pressurized, gas, refrigerant, or structural work becomes professional-only.
Lighting, Electrical, and GFCI Safety
Treat lights, receptacles, breakers, bonding, and wet electrical equipment as life-safety systems with strict owner-safe boundaries.
Pool Safety Basics for Homeowners
Start with barriers, visibility, drain covers, and electrical condition.
Residential vs Public Pool Rules
Keep homeowner guidance separate from public-pool code before you copy a rule into a regulated venue.
Storm Contamination Severity
Classify debris-only, runoff, floodwater, and sewage events so the cleanup plan matches the contamination category.
Educational guidance only. Verify labels, manuals, local code, and site conditions before acting. Stop for electrical, gas, structural, drain, drowning, injury, emergency, or chemical-mixing risk.