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Serving Chicago and Surrounding Suburbs 773.419.0860 |
Safety Guidelines for Home Pools
Swimming pools should always be happy
places.Unfortunately, each year thousands of American families confront
swimming pool tragedies, drowning's and near-drowning's of young children.
These tragedies are preventable. These are guidelines for pool barriers that
can help prevent most submersion incidents involving young children. This
designed for use by owners, purchasers, and builders of residential pools,
spas, and hot tubs. These guidelines are not intended as the sole method to
minimize pool drowning of young children, just helpful safety tips for safer
pools.
Each year, hundreds of young children die and thousands come close to death due to submersion in residential swimming pools. CPSC has estimated that each year about 300 children under 5 years old drown in swimming pools. Hospital emergency room treatment is required for more than 2,000 children under 5 years of age who were submerged in residential pools. CPSC did an extensive study of swimming pool accidents, both fatal drowning's and near-fatal submersions, in California, Arizona and Florida, states in which home swimming pools are very popular and in use during much of the year.
The speed with which swimming pool drowning's and submersions can occur is a special concern: by the time a child’s absence is noted, the child may have drowned. Anyone who has cared for a toddler knows how fast young children can move. Toddlers are inquisitive and impulsive and lack a realistic sense of danger. These behaviors, coupled with a child’s ability to move quickly and unpredictably make swimming pools particularly hazardous for households with young children.
Swimming pool drowning's of young children have another particularly insidious
feature: these are silent deaths. It is unlikely
that splashing or screaming will occur to alert a
parent or caregiver that a child is in trouble. The best way to reduce child drowning's in
residential pools was for pool
owners to construct and maintain barriers that would
prevent young children from gaining access to pools. However, there are no substitutes for diligent supervision.
Why the Swimming Pool Guidelines Were
Developed
Young child can get over a pool barrier if the barrier is too low
or if the barrier has handholds or footholds for a child to use when climbing.
The guidelines recommend that the top of a pool barrier be at least 48 inches
above grade, measured on the side of the barrier which faces away from the
swimming pool. Eliminating handholds and footholds and minimizing the size of
openings in a barrier’s construction.
For a solid barrier no indentations
or protrusions should be present, other than normal construction tolerances and masonry
joints. For a barrier (fence) made up of horizontal and vertical members if the distance between the tops of the
horizontal members is less than 45 inches, the
horizontal members should be on the swimming pool
side of the fence. The spacing of the vertical members should not exceed 1-3/4
inches. This size is based on the foot width of a young child and is intended to reduce the
potential for a child to gain a foothold. If there are any decorative cutouts in the
fence, the space within the cutouts should not exceed 1-3/4 inches.
The definition of pool includes spas and hot tubs.
The swimming pool barrier guidelines therefore apply to these
structures as well as to conventional swimming pools.
How to Prevent a Child from
Getting OVER a Pool Barrier
A successful pool barrier prevents a child from getting OVER, UNDER, or THROUGH and keeps the child from
gaining access to the pool except when supervising adults are present.
The Swimming Pool Barrier Guidelines
If the distance between the tops of
the horizontal members is more than 45 inches, the horizontal members can be on the side of the
fence facing away from the pool. The spacing between vertical members should not exceed 4
inches. This size is based on the head breadth and chest depth of a young child and
is intended to prevent a child from passing through an opening. Again, if there are any
decorative cutouts in the fence, the space within the cutouts should not exceed 1-3/4
inches.
For a chain link fence the mesh size should not exceed 1-1/4 inches square unless slats, fastened at the top or bottom of the fence, are used to reduce mesh openings to no more than 1-3/4 inches.
For a fence made up of diagonal members (latticework) the maximum opening in the lattice should not
exceed 1-3/4 inches.
Aboveground pools should have barriers. The pool
structure itself serves as a barrier or a barrier is mounted on top of the pool
structure. Then, there are two possible ways to prevent young children from
climbing up into an aboveground pool. The steps or ladder can be designed to be
secured, locked or removed to prevent access, or the steps or ladder can be
surrounded by a barrier such as those described above. For any pool barrier, the
maximum clearance at the bottom of the barrier should not exceed 4 inches above
grade, when the measurement is done on the side of the barrier facing away from
the pool.
To prevent a young child from getting through a fence or other
barrier, all openings should be small enough so that a 4-inch diameter sphere cannot pass through.
This size is based on the head breadth and chest depth of a young child.
Gates
There are two kinds of gates which might be found on a residential property. Both can play a part in the design of a swimming pool barrier.
Pedestrian Gates are the
gates people walk through. Swimming pool barriers should be equipped with a gate or
gates which restrict access to the pool. A locking device should be included in the gate
design. Gates should open out from the pool and should be self closing and
self-latching. If a gate is properly designed, even if the gate is not completely latched, a young child pushing on the gate in order to enter the pool area
will at least close the gate and may actually engage
the latch. When the release mechanism of the self-latching device is less than 54
inches from the bottom of the gate, the release mechanism for the gate should be
at least 3 inches below the top of the gate on the side facing the pool. Placing the release
mechanism at this height prevents a young child from reaching over the top of a gate
and releasing the latch.
Also, the gate and barrier should have no opening greater than 1/2 inch within 18 inches of the
latch release mechanism. This prevents a young child from reaching through the gate
and releasing the latch.
Other gates should be equipped with self-latching devices.
The self-latching devices should be installed as described for pedestrian
gates. How to Prevent a Child from Getting UNDER
/ THROUGH a Pool Barrier
All doors which give access to a swimming pool should be equipped
with an audible alarm which sounds when the door and/or screen are opened. The
alarm should sound for 30 seconds or more within 7 seconds after the door is opened and
should be loud, at least 85 decibels, when measured 10 feet away from the alarm
mechanism. The alarm sound should be distinct from other sounds in the house, such
as the telephone, doorbell and smoke alarm. The alarm should have an automatic
reset feature. Because adults will want to pass through house doors in the pool
barrier without setting off the alarm, the alarm
should have a switch that allows adults to temporarily deactivate the alarm
for up to 15 seconds. The deactivation switch could be a touch pad (keypad) or a
manual switch, and should be located at least 54 inches above the threshold of the door
covered by the alarm. This height was selected based on the reaching ability of young
children.
Power safety covers can be installed on pools to serve as security barriers. Power safety covers should conform to the specifications in ASTM F 1346-91. This standard specifies safety performance requirements for pool covers to protect young children from drowning. Self-closing doors with self-latching devices could also be used to safeguard doors which give ready access to a swimming pool.
Indoor Pools
When a pool is located completely within a house, the walls that surround the pool should be
equipped to serve as pool safety barriers. Measures recommended above where a house wall serves
as part of a safety barrier also apply for all the walls surrounding an indoor pool.
Guidelines
An outdoor swimming pool, including an inground, aboveground, or onground pool, hot tub, or spa, should be provided with a
barrier which complies with the following:
1. The top of the barrier should be at least 48 inches above grade measured on the side of the barrier which faces away from the swimming pool. The maximum vertical clearance between grade and the bottom of the barrier should be 4 inches measured on the side of the barrier which faces away from the swimming pool. Where the top of the pool structure is above grade, such as an aboveground pool, the barrier may be at ground level, such as the pool structure, or mounted on top of the pool structure. Where the barrier is mounted on top of the pool structure, the maximum vertical clearance between the top of the pool structure and the bottom of the barrier should be 4 inches.
2. Openings in the barrier should not allow passage of a 4-inch diameter sphere.
3. Solid barriers, which do not have openings, such as a masonry or stone wall, should not contain indentations or protrusions except for normal construction tolerances and tooled masonry joints.
4. Where the barrier is composed of horizontal and vertical members and the distance
between the tops of the horizontal members is less than 45 inches, the
horizontal members should be located on the swimming pool side of the fence.
Spacing between vertical members should not exceed 1-3/4 inches in width.
Where there are decorative cutouts, spacing within the cutouts should not
exceed 1-3/4 inches in width.
5. Where the barrier is composed of horizontal and vertical members and the distance between the tops of the horizontal members is 45 inches or more, spacing between vertical members should not exceed 4 inches. Where there are decorative cutouts, spacing within the cutouts should not exceed 1-3/4 inches in width.
6. Maximum mesh size for chain link fences should not exceed 1-3/4 inch square
unless the fence is provided with slats fastened at
the top or the bottom which reduce the openings to
no more than 1-3/4 inches.
7. Where the barrier is composed of diagonal
members, such as a lattice fence, the maximum opening formed by the diagonal
members should be no more than 1-3/4 inches.
8. Access gates to the pool should be
equipped to accommodate a locking device. Pedestrian
access gates should open outward, away from the
pool, and should be self-closing and have a self
latching device. Gates other than pedestrian access gates should have a self-latching
device. Where the release mechanism of the
self-latching device is located less than 54 inches
from the bottom of the gate.
9. Where a wall of a dwelling serves as part of the barrier, one of the following should apply:
10. Where an aboveground pool structure is used as
a barrier or where the barrier is mounted on top of the pool structure, and
the means of access is a ladder or steps, then:
These guidelines are intended to provide a means of
protection against potential drowning's and narrowing to children under 5
years of age by restricting access to residential swimming pools, spas, and
hot tubs.
Exemptions
A portable spa with a safety cover which complies
with ASTM F1346-91 listed below should be exempt from the guidelines presented
in this document. Swimming pools, hot tubs, and non portable spas with safety
covers should not be exempt from the provisions of this document.
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