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Pillar guide · 4 articles

Pool Safety: Codes, Equipment, and Emergency Response

Pools are fun — drownings are not. This pillar covers the non-negotiable safety standards every Florida homeowner and technician must follow, with a focus on the laws that actually get enforced.

Drowning is the leading cause of death for Florida children ages 1–4. No amount of water chemistry matters if the pool isn't safe to be around. This pillar covers the laws, equipment, and procedures that save lives.

The layers of pool safety

No single safeguard is enough. The Florida Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act, the ANSI/APSP standards, and the Red Cross all recommend layered defense — multiple independent safety measures, any one of which could prevent a drowning:

  • Barrier: 4-foot fence with self-closing, self-latching gate
  • Detection: Pool alarm, gate alarm, or surface-wave alarm
  • Cover: ASTM F1346-compliant safety cover for unattended times
  • Anti-entrapment: VGB-compliant drain covers (federally required since 2008)
  • Supervision: Designated water watcher, no exceptions
  • Training: CPR-certified adults in the household

Florida's pool safety law — what actually applies to you

Florida Statute 515 (the Residential Swimming Pool Safety Act) requires at least one of four approved safety features on every residential pool built after 2000: barrier, approved safety cover, exit alarm on every door leading to the pool, or self-closing/self-latching device. Older pools may be grandfathered — but “legal” and “safe” are not the same.

Pool Safety · Article 1 of 4
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