[Nhhoa] Pool Problems

NHHOA Treasurer treasurer at nhhoa.org
Sat May 31 07:57:57 CDT 2008


Scott,

 

Glad to see you didn't unsubscribe to the email list based!

 

Vicki told Kimberly (my wife and not a board member) last night about 6:00pm
about the chlorine tab in the skimmer.  I agree with your assessment.  It
needs to be corrected.  

 

When you found the low chlorine reading, did you let Walker know (Chair of
the Amenities committee and Board member)?

 

I think it's great that you are taking the time to check - it makes it
better for all of us - but we can't fix it if we don't know about it.

 

Can you please help me understand the benefit of reporting to Bartow County
without notifying Walker, Amy, or Tom and letting the board know of the
problem?

 

Roger Hackler

 

From: nhhoa-bounces at nhhoa.org [mailto:nhhoa-bounces at nhhoa.org] On Behalf Of
scott and vicki
Sent: Saturday, May 31, 2008 8:31 AM
To: North Hampton Homeowners Association
Subject: [Nhhoa] Pool Problems

 

Before I begin I would like to say that the pool contract is in the past, I
am writing this as a concern homeowner and a certified pool operator. we
check all pools our kids get in weather in its a hotel, a friends house, or
here in the neighborhood

 

 

The pool has been open for about one month now and we have found two major
pool violations that have been brought to the boards attention. 

 

The first was a couple of weeks ago on a Sunday their was no chlorine
reading. the pool should have been close. we spoke with the county and they
said unless they catch them there is nothing that can be done. They also
said since we are not the CPO of record there is nothing we can do except
report it so we did. Also only the CPO of record can add chemicals not board
members or homeowners.

 

The second problem was yesterday when we found chlorine tabs in the skimmer
basket. Those of you that do not know the skimmer basket is the hole in the
side of the pool where the leaves and debris floating on top goes in to be
caught. This is a major hazard to swimmers and a major liability to the
homeowners.

 

As it was stated in the annual meeting we have kids from other neighborhood
coming and swimming in our pool unsupervised . If one of these kids or even
one of our own kids reach in and started playing with this tablet or god
forbid takes a bite of this it would be very bad.

It was also stated in the annual meeting that all homeowners can be held
liable as well. 

The new pool company told the board that 5 days a week  was unnecessary. I
believe they are finding out that this is a real high traffic pool and it
takes more than they thought. I hope they do not continue to cut corners and
get us in trouble or someone sick.

 

I know Aqua Touch told the board the something, however this would have been
just a cost saving measure as I stated in the beginning we check all pool
before our kids get in. 

 

Parents please watch your kids and check the chemicals in the pools. A kit
is only $10 and takes 15 sec to dip a stick for your and your kids safety.

 

 

Scott Smith

 

 

 

 

 

 

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