Op Editorials
Benefits of Education for Pool Pros: Certified Pool Operator® CPO® Course
CPO Instructor Lauren Broom discusses the benefits of education for pool pros and the value of CPO courses and certification.
During my time as a public pool health inspector in Florida, I checked pool operator certification two times per year. Once, I inspected a public pool that had many violations that resulted in pool closure due to lack of free chlorine and high pH levels. Upon checking the certification of the local pool company technician, it turned out that the technician was not certified. A lack of education for pool pros could have explained the many severe public health and safety violations that I saw. A phone call to the pool company resulted in enrollment of their pool tech in an approved pool operator certification course within 30 days.

How Does The CPO® Course Set You Apart From Other Pool Service Techs?
This certification is nationally recognized with a standardized curriculum on health and safety that is accepted by most regulatory authorities. Having this certification allows a pool service technician to clean and service public and private pools. It could help increase the customer base of the pool service company but also the quality of service given. In time, this will help the pool service tech to retain customers through thorough service that results from this training program. Uninformed pool techs can become informed pool techs if they are serious about completing pool industry training. However, it should be noted that this certification is not a state license and does not allow repair of any pool.
I have been a PHTA® CPO® instructor for the past thirteen years and have taught hundreds of pool service techs. My biggest enjoyment with the CPO® course is to instill education for pool pros based on real-world experiences during my 17 years with the Florida Dept. of Health as a public pool inspector.
What Should a Pool Service Tech Expect to Learn?
First, why would a pool professional get CPO® certified? Most pool pros initially get their certification so they can service and maintain commercial pools. What not that many pool pros realize is just how important proper training is for continued success. Risk management is one topic not often considered in the pool industry and sometimes the pool pro does it without even knowing that they are. Identification of risks and meeting OSHA standards in the pool industry is not something often followed or discussed. These topics are briefly covered in this course to minimize or eliminate safety hazards in the pool area. Also, recordkeeping is highlighted as one of the most important items for a pool service tech to do after training. Proper recordkeeping helps to legally protect a pool pro by showing that they were not negligent. Do not underestimate the usefulness of a detailed chemical and maintenance log. As in the case with many other industries, if you don’t document it, the inspector won’t believe that you did it!
What Can I Learn About Recreational Water Illnesses And Fecal Accidents?
A good pool pro should know what steps should be taken when there is a fecal accident in their pool. They would learn about these steps and what the negative impacts are if they do not follow the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) fecal guidelines, which are taught in this course.
Personal Experience
Health departments like the one I worked at monitor all reportable illnesses and interview ill people. Interviews were conducted to identify where the person might have swum while ill. Afterwards, the pool pro for that pool was contacted. This contact was documented by the inspector in the epidemiology medical records regarding the requirements of the pool pro to follow CDC Fecal Guidelines. These guidelines are taught as part of the CPO® Course. The pool pro also learns that they are negligent if more people get sick due to their lack of knowledge about recreational water illnesses and what actions to take for fecal accidents in pool water.
What Chemicals Can Be Used to Disinfect Pool Water?
A pool pro should learn what pool chemicals that they could use as a disinfectant against recreational water illnesses and oxidize other contaminants. This concept is very important to maintain a safe and healthy pool. Disinfectants are the main tool that any pool service tech can utilize to keep algae out of the water and to prevent recreational water illnesses. The CPO® course details all the chemical tools available to the pool professional.
What is Pool Water Balance and How Important is it to a Pool Service Tech?
The most important concept taught in the CPO® Course is water balance. This is the one concept that a pool pro should take away from this course. Pool water balance takes all the individual puzzle pieces of total alkalinity, pH, calcium hardness, total dissolved solids (TDS) and temperature and put them together. These water balance parameters are connected to each other to determine if the water is corrosive(hungry) or scaling(overstuffed) water. The ideal result is to have the pool water balanced. The pool pro learns about the consequences of unbalanced water on the pool surface and all other pool system components that the water touches. These consequences can be financially devastating to the pool customers and ultimately lead to loss of customers.
Water balance is a great tool for private pools too. A vast majority of newly constructed private pools are on salt chlorine generators. Pool water imbalance has a negative effect on a salt chlorine generator and its ability to properly generate free chlorine into the water. In turn, this affects how recreational water illnesses are killed and algae is destroyed.

What Amount of Chemicals Should Be Added to the Pool for Water Imbalances?
Pool water levels are not always going to be properly balanced, and changes have to be made to correct these imbalances. Pool chemical dosage, or the amount of chemicals to be added to a pool to correct imbalanced pool water levels is heavily covered in this course. Pool pro should leave this course with an improved understanding of what chemicals to use in the proper amount. Improper training can result in chemical overdoses or not adding enough chemicals to correct imbalances. Overdoses can cause harm to pool users, such as burns. The lack of proper education for pool pros can ultimately lead to people being harmed.
How Does a Pool Service Tech Test the Pool Water?
Proper water testing procedures are covered in the CPO® Course. Hands-on pool water testing occurs at many in person CPO courses. Many pool pros are amazed at some of the small mistakes they make on water testing after the completion of the course. The pool pro will even learn about the proper method to store their pool test kit. As an instructor, proper test kit storage is a small topic but one of the biggest mistakes made by pool pros. Typically, they do not realize how improper test kit storage affects obtaining accurate water test results.
Personal Experience
I conducted countless inspections where the pool pro had improperly stored their pool test kit on their trailer, in the bed of their truck, on their pool vacuum tray, or in the pool equipment area. Temperature would significantly affect the accuracy of the water test results.
What is Suction Entrapment?
Entrapment involves a person getting stuck on a suction outlet, mostly the main drain outlet. Suction entrapment is a very important topic covered in the CPO® Course. It tackles the two main types of pool circulation designs and how they impact entrapment. The course details prevention as the best line of defense. Most pool codes require the use of a main drain cover that meets the Virginia Graham Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act of 2008. Pool pros are taught how important it is for them to do their visual safety inspections of these main drain covers to ensure they are intact and not loose or missing.
Furthermore, the course also shows that a vacuum line cover is also on direct suction and that those vacuum line safety covers must also be compliant. Children can still get their arms entrapped even if the vacuum pump is inoperable.


Missing vacuum line covers were a very common violation on inspection reports.
What are the Working Parts of a Pool?
Pool pros shall understand what the different parts of a pool system are that control circulation, filtration, chemical treatment and heating. The CPO® course highlights each section of the pool equipment and how it works in the pool. The course details basic maintenance and problems with the equipment that can be handled by a certified pool operator. Remember, any repairs still must be completed by a licensed pool contractor.
Stuck flow meters or holes in vacuum DE filter grids are common violations that are noted by health inspectors. These pool violations could have been prevented through better education.

What About Local Regulatory Public Pool Code?
Pool pros should be taught about the local public pool rules and how they apply to their facilities. As an inspector, I would inspect public pools and come across so many poorly trained pool pros that did not even know how a public pool was defined or how it was regulated. In these instances, the pools would usually be closed due to lack of proper training on Chapter 64E-9, F.A.C. CPO® Instructors are required to educate on the local regulatory code with their students.

Final Reflection
In my experience of conducting pool inspections, I have truly seen the implications from the lack of formal training like the CPO® Course can have on a pool service business. Education is one item that a pool service tech can do for themselves to stay in compliance, but to also to just keep the pool healthy and safe. Many public pool closures can be prevented through proper education.
Op Editorials
Perception Equals Reality in The Pool Trade, Know Your Worth
If you ask most pool pros how they see themselves, the answer is pretty consistent.
We’re rugged.
We’re sun-kissed.
We’ve got forearms like rebar and a tan that says “I work outside for a living.”
In our own mental highlight reel, we’re stepping off a photoshoot. Truck door shuts. Sunglasses on. Water sparkling behind us. A light breeze catches the brim of the hat. The pool is perfect because we made it that way.
We’re craftsmen.
We’re troubleshooters.
We’re the superheroes of summer.
That’s how we see ourselves.
Now let’s talk about how customers see us.
Because depending on the day — and the invoice — we’re not always the hero in the slow-motion montage.
Sometimes we’re something else entirely.
“Can You Do It for Half?”
The Customer That Thinks You’re a Clown

You hand them an estimate.
They tilt their head.
“Can you do it for half?”
In that moment, something shifts. Suddenly you’re not a professional with insurance, fuel costs, payroll, chemical increases, equipment overhead, licensing, and taxes.
You’re Bozo.
They see you juggling test kits and chlorine tabs, honking a horn, performing tricks for their amusement.
“Come on, it’ll only take you a few minutes.”
“It’s just brushing and checking chemicals.”
“My cousin said it shouldn’t cost that much.”
In their mind, your time is elastic. Your experience is optional. Your overhead is imaginary.
What they see: A guy who can cut his price in half if he just “wants the work bad enough.”
What you see: The math doesn’t change just because someone asks nicely.
The clown persona is born when price becomes entertainment. And suddenly you’re expected to juggle.
“You’re Way Overpriced.”
The Customer Who Thinks You’re Robbing Them

This one is sure of it.
They don’t just think you’re expensive.
They think you’re stealing from them.
You present your proposal. They lean back. Arms crossed.
“I had a guy who did it for way less.”
Sure you did.
In their imagination, you’re standing there in a ski mask with a bag full of hundred-dollar bills. Every invoice is a heist. Every service call is a getaway.
They don’t see the truck payment.
They don’t see the two hours in traffic.
They don’t see the diagnostic time before you ever touched a tool.
They see a number — and they see themselves losing.
The irony? Most pool pros price to survive, not to rob. Margins are tighter than most homeowners realize. Fuel, chemicals, parts, software, payroll, insurance — it all adds up.
But perception is powerful.
When someone thinks you’re overpriced, you’re no longer a technician.
You’re a thief in broad daylight.
“I Can Pay You Next Month.”
This Customer Thinks You’re a Multi-Millionaire Running a Non-Profit

Then there’s the customer who assumes you operate like a bank.
“I can get you next month.”
Translation: Carry me.
In their world, you’re sitting on a pile of cash. Money flows freely. You can float balances indefinitely because, well, you must be rolling in it.
You fix their pump today.
You replace the filter.
You clean up the mess.
And they’ll square up… eventually.
They don’t see payroll hitting Friday morning.
They don’t see supplier invoices due in 15 days.
They don’t see the credit card bill from the parts you fronted.
In their mind, you’re a small business owner — which must mean you’re independently wealthy.
In reality, you’re operating on razor-thin cash flow like most service businesses in America.
You’re not a millionaire floating bills.
You’re a working professional trying to keep everything moving.
“I Need It Done Immediately.”
This Customer Thinks You’re Some Sort of a Magician

This one’s my favorite.
They call at 4:30 PM on a Friday.
“We’re having a party tomorrow.”
And suddenly, you’re not a pool pro. You’re Harry Potter.
You’re expected to wave a wand and reverse three weeks of neglect in 12 hours.
Green water?
Broken heater?
Dead pump?
Cracked valve?
No problem. Surely you can just make it happen. In their head, you’ve been waiting by the phone for this very moment. No other customers. No schedule. No route. No other emergencies.
Just you, poised dramatically beside your truck, ready to conjure clarity out of chaos.
They don’t see the 40 other pools on the route.
They don’t see the backlog of parts.
They don’t see that “immediately” is rarely possible without someone else waiting longer.
But urgency has a way of rewriting reality.
And when a party is on the line, you’re not a technician.
You’re a magician.
“Can You Break It Down for Me?”
The Customer Who Wants You To Break Down Every Bill

Then there’s the spreadsheet shopper.
They want every detail itemized.
Every chemical.
Every labor minute.
Every markup.
Every gasket.
Get your dancing shoes on. You’re not just giving an estimate. You’re performing.
They want to compare you to the next five guys who show up in a Google search. They want to line up your numbers like a fantasy football draft and see who’s cheapest.
In that moment, you’re not a pool professional.
You’re a break dancer on cardboard.
“Break it down for me.”
While transparency is good — and professionalism demands clarity — there’s a difference between understanding the work and dissecting it to the penny so it can be shopped.
Some customers see a partner.
Others see a spreadsheet.
The Reality Behind the Personas
Here’s the part we don’t talk about enough.
Most pool pros are just normal people running small businesses. We’ve got mortgages, kids, payroll to meet, trucks that need maintenance, supplier accounts that come due whether we got paid or not, and alarm clocks that go off long before most of our customers are awake. This isn’t a hobby or a side hustle — it’s how we feed our families.
We’re not clowns looking to perform at half price, and we’re not thieves twisting our moustaches, plotting ways to rip off the customer. We’re not sitting on piles of cash, and we’re definitely not magicians who can bend time and reality to accommodate every last-minute request. We’re professionals who learned a trade, invested in equipment, carry insurance, and take on real responsibility every time we touch someone’s backyard.
There’s pride in this work. Clear water doesn’t happen by accident. Equipment doesn’t fix itself. When something breaks, leaks, shorts out, or turns green overnight, someone has to understand the system well enough to diagnose it and make it right. That knowledge comes from experience — and experience has value.
Most of us aren’t trying to squeeze every buck we can out of a customer. We’re not eager to argue over invoices or chase unpaid balances. We don’t enjoy telling someone we can’t reshuffle an entire week because a party was scheduled without notice. What we want is pretty simple: to do great work, to be treated fairly, and to have our expertise respected.
At the end of the day, pool pros and homeowners actually want the same thing — a backyard that works the way it’s supposed to and a relationship that feels honest. When there’s mutual respect, all those exaggerated personas disappear, and what’s left is just a professional providing a service for customers who value it.
The Business Side of Perception Equals Reality
There’s a hard truth in this industry that doesn’t get talked about enough: perception is reality.
If a customer believes your time isn’t valuable, they’ll treat it that way. If they believe your pricing is flexible, they’ll test it. If they believe you “need the work,” they’ll negotiate accordingly.
But where does that perception come from?
A lot of it starts with the pool pro.
How you present an estimate matters. How you explain scope matters. Whether you pause and wait after stating your price — or immediately start justifying it — matters. Customers read hesitation. They read uncertainty. And they respond to it.
This isn’t about ego. It’s about positioning.
If you treat your service like a commodity, it will be compared like one. If you present it as skilled, insured, accountable professional work — with systems, standards, and policies behind it — it gets treated differently.
Self-worth in business isn’t emotional. It shows up in structure.
Do you have clear payment terms?
Do you enforce them?
Do you charge diagnostic time consistently?
Do you walk away when a job doesn’t make sense?
Those decisions communicate value far more than any speech about “experience” ever will.
When you value your time, you schedule it intentionally.
When you value your expertise, you charge for it.
When you value your service, you stop racing to the bottom.
Customers take cues from how you operate. If you discount quickly, they learn to wait for it. If you bend policies often, they expect exceptions. If you over-explain your pricing defensively, they sense it’s negotiable.
On the flip side, when you’re clear and steady — “Here’s the scope. Here’s the price. Here’s how we handle payment.” — most reasonable customers adjust to that framework.
The industry sometimes conditions pool pros to feel lucky just to have the work. But this is skilled labor. It requires technical knowledge, physical effort, liability, and responsibility. The backyard may be leisure for the homeowner, but it’s infrastructure when it breaks.
If you don’t believe your work has real value, it’s hard to expect customers to believe it either.
Perception is reality in service businesses. The way you see your own operation — serious business or side hustle, professional service or “just pool work” — shapes how others respond to you.
And over time, the customers you attract will mirror that perception.
Op Editorials
Acid Washing Safety: What Every Pool Pro Should Know
There’s something deeply satisfying about seeing a dull, stained pool surface turn bright and clean again after a good acid wash. It’s like hitting the reset button on a pool that’s seen better days. But as any seasoned pool pro knows, this powerful process comes with some serious risks.
Acid washing uses muriatic acid (hydrochloric acid)—a chemical strong enough to dissolve mineral buildup, algae, and stains. That same strength, though, can cause burns, lung damage, and serious injuries if not handled the right way. Knowing how to stay safe isn’t just a good idea—it’s essential for protecting yourself, your crew, and your customers.
Why You Can’t Cut Corners on Safety
Muriatic acid is no joke. A splash on your skin or a breath of concentrated fumes can do real harm in seconds. It can also eat away at pool finishes and metal fixtures if it’s not used properly. The goal is to make the pool look better—not cause damage or danger along the way.
When you follow safety protocols, you’re not just checking boxes—you’re building a reputation for professionalism and responsibility that customers notice.
Safety Basics Every Pool Pro Should Practice
1. Paperwork Isn’t Just Paperwork
Before you start mixing anything, make sure your Hazard Communication Program is up to date. Have Safety Data Sheets (SDS) for every chemical you use, and double-check that all containers are clearly labeled. This may seem tedious, but if something goes wrong, this documentation can be a lifesaver—literally and legally.

2. Dress Like You Mean It
When you’re handling acid, jeans and sunglasses aren’t enough. You’ll need:
● Acid-resistant gloves (rubber or neoprene)
● Chemical splash goggles and a face shield
● Long-sleeved acid-resistant clothing or a Tyvek suit
● Closed-toe, chemical-resistant boots
● A respirator with acid-gas cartridges if ventilation isn’t great
It might not be a fashion statement, but it’s definitely a safety statement.

3. Let It Breathe
If you’re working in an indoor pool or a deep end, acid fumes can build up fast. Always use fans, open doors and windows, and wear a respirator if needed. OSHA even considers an acid-washing pool a permit-required confined space—so don’t take chances. When in doubt, step out and get fresh air.

4. Mix with Care
There’s one golden rule every pool pro should memorize: Always add acid to water—never water to acid. Doing it backwards can cause an instant, violent reaction that splashes acid everywhere. Mix outdoors, use plastic containers, and keep people (and pets) far away while you work.

5. Be Kind to the Environment
Once you’ve finished the wash, it’s time to neutralize the leftover acid with sodium bicarbonate (baking soda). Never let untreated acid flow into a storm drain or onto the lawn. Not only is that harmful, it can also get you in trouble with local environmental agencies. Take a few extra minutes to neutralize properly and practice disposal according to local rules.

Two Is Better Than One
Whenever possible, don’t go it alone. Have another technician on deck while you’re in the pool. That second person can pass tools, monitor fumes, or call for help if something unexpected happens. It’s simple teamwork that makes the job safer for everyone.

Be Ready for the “What-Ifs”
Even with the best precautions, accidents can happen. Make sure you have:
● An eye wash station or portable eyewash bottle within arm’s reach
● A fresh water source nearby for rinsing skin or eyes
● A neutralizing agent like baking soda ready to go
● Up-to-date first-aid training for handling chemical exposure
At Pool Troopers in Tampa, FL, for example, every employee is issued proper safety gear and trained on SDS procedures—an approach all pool companies can learn from.

The Bottom Line
Acid washing is one of the most dramatic makeovers you can give a pool—but it’s not something to take lightly. The right preparation, gear, and mindset make all the difference between a successful job and a dangerous one.
If you’re looking to sharpen your safety skills, check out the OSHA 10 Course for Pool Pros that I offer through Space Coast Pool School. It’s a great way to stay informed, stay compliant, and most importantly—stay safe.
Contractors and Builders
“But It Passed Inspection”: Why That’s No Defense for Code Non-Compliance
Every pool builder or contractor has heard it—or said it—at some point:
“But it passed inspection.”
Those words often come up in courtrooms, after a project has gone sideways and litigation is underway. It’s a phrase meant to shift blame, to suggest that because an inspector signed off, everything must have been done correctly. Unfortunately, that’s not how the law works.
Passing inspection does not equal being code-compliant. And when problems arise, it’s the builder or designer, not the inspector, who carries the legal and financial responsibility for non-compliance. Understanding how building standards are adopted, enforced, and referenced is critical for every professional in the pool and spa industry.
Understanding How Standards Become Law
Most contractors know that building codes exist, but fewer understand how those codes are structured. Many of the technical details that govern your work are not printed in the state building code itself. Instead, they’re part of what’s known as “adopted by reference”—external standards that are legally binding even though they aren’t printed word for word in the codebook.
For example, the International Code Council’s International Swimming Pool and Spa Code (ICC-ISPSC) is one of the most widely adopted pool construction standards in the country. Many states have formally adopted the ISPSC by reference through their residential or building code appendices. That means that even though you won’t find every detail of the ISPSC spelled out in the printed state code, it carries the full weight of law.
How “Adopted by Reference” Works
When you look at your state’s residential building code, you’ll often find an appendix titled “Referenced Standards.” This section lists all of the national and international standards the state has chosen to adopt for that code cycle.
Most of the larger, more populous states are on a three-year code revision cycle, staying current with the ICC and IAPMO (International Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials) updates. Smaller states tend to move on longer cycles, sometimes adopting every six or nine years.
Instead of reprinting the full ISPSC document, the state code typically includes a short statement that ties the local law directly to that standard.
For example:
•. In the 2015 Texas Residential Code, section 326.1 states: “The design and construction of pools and spas shall comply with the International Swimming Pool and Spa Code.”
•. The 2018 Tennessee Residential Building Code uses nearly identical language in its own section 326.1.
This simple line means that the entire ISPSC—every clause, every diagram, every standard—becomes part of that state’s enforceable building law.

What’s Inside the ISPSC?
When a standard is adopted by reference, you’re bound to comply with all of it. That includes requirements for:
•. Water circulation rates and line velocities
•. Floor contours, slope transitions, and steps
•. Handholds and ladder spacing
•. Anti-entrapment and anti-drowning features
•. Safety barriers, fencing, and alarms
•. Structural load and shell integrity
•. Equipment placement, bonding, and electrical standards
In short, “adopted by reference” brings the entire ISPSC—and all of its subsections—into play for every new pool or spa construction project in that jurisdiction.
When Local Jurisdictions Modify the Code
Local municipalities do have some authority to modify state codes, but they can’t do it informally. To avoid enforcing specific portions of the state building code, a local government must pass a formal resolution listing every section of the state code that they are choosing not to adopt.
This is rare, but it happens. For example, California and Florida both have their own pool-specific codes that go beyond the ISPSC. These state-level codes are considered more stringent than the ICC’s model code, so they don’t need to reference it directly.
However, for the vast majority of states, the ISPSC—or another comparable standard—is part of the law by reference.
Inspectors Are Not the Final Authority
Here’s where many builders get tripped up: local inspectors do not routinely read or study the building codes in full detail.
Most inspectors rely on experience and precedent. It’s not until they review a set of plans that cites a specific code section or standard that they realize a particular provision applies. That’s why a project can “pass inspection” even though it’s not fully compliant with the adopted standards.
In these situations, ignorance of the code is not a defense—for the inspector or the builder. But while inspectors are largely protected by sovereign immunity, meaning they can’t be sued for missing violations, builders and designers are not.
If a defect later leads to injury or property damage, the responsibility lands squarely on the contractor or design professional. Courts have consistently ruled that “passing inspection” does not exempt a builder from liability if the work fails to meet applicable codes and standards.

The Legal and Financial Reality
In personal injury or construction defect litigation, one of the first questions attorneys ask is: “Was the work code-compliant?”
If the answer is no, it doesn’t matter that the project was approved by a local inspector. The standard of care in these cases is what the law requires, not what the inspector accepted.
Builders and designers are legally responsible for:
•. Knowing which codes apply in their jurisdiction
•. Keeping current with code updates and revisions
•. Ensuring that all referenced standards are followed
•. Documenting compliance throughout the project
Failing to do so can expose contractors to claims of negligence, breach of contract, or professional misconduct, even years after the project is complete.
“It Passed Inspection” Is Not a Defense
The concept of sovereign immunity exists to protect public officials, including building inspectors, from lawsuits when they make honest mistakes. That protection does not extend to private builders.
In the eyes of the law, you’re the expert. You’re expected to know the applicable codes and standards. When a violation exists, you can’t rely on an inspector’s oversight as a shield.
Saying, “But it passed inspection,” is equivalent to admitting you didn’t understand your own obligations under the law.
Staying Ahead of the Curve
So, where should builders go to stay informed? The most accessible resource is UpCodes, an online library that provides searchable access to state-specific building codes and referenced standards.
UpCodes makes it easy to:
•. Search your state’s adopted code cycles
•. Review appendices for referenced standards
•. Track amendments or local modifications
•. Stay up to date on pending revisions
It’s also a good practice to maintain a copy of the current ICC-ISPSC or your state’s equivalent pool code in your office or jobsite trailer. Regularly reviewing it with your design and field teams helps prevent costly oversights.
A Builder’s Responsibility
Complying with building codes and referenced standards isn’t about passing inspections—it’s about protecting lives, property, and your professional reputation.
Builders who study their codes, document compliance, and communicate clearly with inspectors and clients show the kind of professionalism that defines true craftsmanship.
Codes aren’t arbitrary red tape; they’re the accumulation of decades of engineering, safety research, and field experience. When you follow them—not just the parts you know, but the full scope of what’s adopted by reference—you’re doing more than meeting legal requirements. You’re building with integrity.
Final Thoughts on the Subject
The next time you hear someone say, “But it passed inspection,” remember this: inspections are a checkpoint, not a certification of compliance. The responsibility—and the liability—always comes back to the builder.
Do your homework, know your state’s adopted standards, and make compliance a cornerstone of every project. It’s not just good business—it’s the law.
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