• Compliance Without Ownership
    Mar 21 2026

    A place can be trained, certified, inspected, and still be unsafe. This episode explains why.
    What happens when a facility is trained, certified, inspected, automated, and still unsafe? This episode looks at the gap between compliance on paper and real-world ownership in the field. Using the Marie Joseph case as a starting point, Jason Davies breaks down how rules can exist, vendors can exist, reports can exist, and yet no one with real authority steps in before failure occurs. This is a public-interest episode about responsibility, judgment, and why safety fails when everyone touches the issue but no one owns it.

    CPC1460695

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    8 mins
  • What Guests Miss When a Hotel Pool Looks Safe
    Mar 14 2026

    Many people arrive at hotels and resorts assuming the pool area has already been fully thought through. Most of the time, they see the water, the signs, the gates, the deck, and the family-friendly setting — and that is enough to create trust.

    This episode looks at the gap between that trust and the actual field condition.

    From a modified children’s slide discharge to chipped tile on a sunshelf, from gate function issues to openings near pool paths, and from posted rule signs to water features that may visually communicate something very different from what the wording suggests, this is a practical look at how small details can quietly change the safety picture around water.

    This is not about panic. It is about awareness.

    Because around pools, little things can change the whole picture quickly.

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    12 mins
  • The Pool Store Water Test Was Free. The Damage Was Expensive.
    Mar 1 2026

    Most pool owners trust the printout.

    If a pool store water test says the water is 100% perfect, the assumption is simple: the water is balanced, the chemistry is safe, and any damage must be coming from somewhere else.

    But that assumption can be wrong.

    In this episode of the Pool Envy® Podcast, we break down a real-world example where pool water tested “perfect” on paper, yet still calculated to a negative LSI — meaning the water could be corrosive, aggressive, and slowly pulling from plaster, grout, tile, and metal over time.

    This episode explains why pool water chemistry is not just about whether numbers look “in range.” We cover why balanced pool water is more than a simple printout, how cyanuric acid can affect alkalinity behind the scenes, why one test result is only a snapshot, and how LSI helps reveal what the water may actually be doing long-term.

    If you are a homeowner, service client, or someone handling DIY pool care, this episode will likely change how you look at pool test results, pool maintenance mistakes, and the false confidence that can come from a free test at the pool store.

    Because the real question is not:

    “Did the test pass?”

    It is:

    What is this water doing over time?

    Topics in this episode include: pool store water test, pool water chemistry, negative LSI, corrosive pool water, aggressive pool water, pool water balance, cyanuric acid, alkalinity, plaster damage, grout damage, tile damage, metal corrosion, DIY pool care, and pool maintenance mistakes.

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    5 mins
  • Florida CS/CS/SB 658: Vacation Rental Pool Safety (Compliance Wins & Contractor Pitfalls)
    Feb 23 2026

    Confusion is expensive — and in Florida rental homes, confusion can turn into tragedy and real penalties. In this episode, we break down Florida CS/CS/SB 658 (now tied with SB 608) and what it means for both vacation rentals and residential rentals if it becomes law.

    We’ll cover what the bill requires, where owners and contractors will get burned, and how to build a simple compliance packet that holds up in audits, claims, and disputes — without turning your project into a paperwork circus.

    In this episode:

    • What triggers the rule (water body within 150 feet, or a pool on premises)
    • The two compliance paths: exit alarms (85 dB A @ 10 feet) or self-closing/self-latching doors (release ≥ 54")
    • Why many Florida pools already had safety features to pass final inspection / certificate of completion
    • Enforcement reality (vacation rental licensing actions + “misdemeanor” teeth)
    • Contractor pitfalls: partial coverage, wrong device category, and installs with no specs
    • The “Compliance Packet” that separates pros from chaos: spec sheets + photos + dated & signed checklist

    Links (for listeners who want receipts):

    • Bill text (CS/CS/SB 658 & 608, 1st Engrossed PDF)
    • Senate bill analysis (plain-language overview)
    • Florida Statute 515.27 (final inspection / certificate of completion language)

    Not legal advice. This is a real-world compliance breakdown.

    If you want property-specific guidance, that starts with a paid Safety & System Evaluation. I don’t diagnose your setup blindly over the internet.
    Pool Envy — Florida CPC1460695


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    6 mins
  • The Cheapest Pool Contractor Is the Most Expensive Choice
    Feb 15 2026

    “I just want the cheapest contractor because I can’t afford it right now.”

    I get it. But pools punish cheap decisions—because the savings up front often come back as a bigger invoice later: rework, delays, failed inspections, buried defects, safety issues, and finger-pointing when something goes wrong.

    In this episode, Jason breaks down real, anonymous mid-build disaster patterns: the “homeowner pulls the permit” trap, structural phases done without proper oversight, the accountability dodge (“I don’t do that portion”), and contractor gaslighting—how it sounds, why it works, and how to shut it down with simple verification.

    You’ll leave with a practical checklist you can use before you pay a deposit, plus red flags that show up early—before you get stuck holding the bag.

    In this episode:

    • The permit trap: why “you pull it” is a flashing warning light
    • Gaslighting and blame-shifting (and the only response that works)
    • Mid-build failures: how “cheap” turns into “pay twice”
    • A homeowner vetting checklist you can use in one call

    (Educational content only — not legal advice.) Pool Envy, LLC CPC1460695 - Pool Envy is a registered trademark of Pool Envy, LLC. Wisconsin.

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    16 mins
  • The Pool Project That Ended in Court — What Actually Went Wrong
    Feb 8 2026

    The pool looked fine—until it didn’t. And by the time it turns into a dispute, the conversation changes completely.

    When a pool project goes sideways, the internet gets loud—but the real world gets quiet: paperwork, photos, timelines, and standards. In this episode of the Pool Envy® Podcast, Jason Davies (Pool Envy®, Florida CPC1460695) breaks down what actually matters when a project crosses the line from “built” to “defensible.”

    We get into the gap between a pool that exists and a pool that can hold up under scrutiny—licensed vs unlicensed work, the “I’m insured” myth, and why most bad projects stay civil while some escalate further. You’ll also hear the uncomfortable reality most people miss: winning a dispute and actually collecting are not the same thing.

    This episode is about understanding risk before it shows up—so you can make better decisions before signing a contract, not after something fails.

    Educational only. Not legal advice. Not insurance advice. Not a substitute for an on-site evaluation.

    #PoolEnvy #PoolIndustry #PoolContractor #PoolSafety #NEC680 #CodeCompliance #PoolInspection #ExpertWitness #ConstructionLaw #HomeImprovement

    Pool Envy® is a registered trademark of Pool Envy, LLC.

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    11 mins
  • Your Plaster Didn’t Fail Because of Salt — This Is What Actually Caused It
    Jan 25 2026

    Your plaster didn’t fail because of salt—and most people are looking at the wrong cause.

    Saltwater isn’t “chlorine-free.” A salt system is simply a chlorine generator producing sanitizer on-site. When the fundamentals are off, it’s just a different way to get the wrong result.

    In this episode, Jason Davies (Pool Envy®, Florida CPC1460695) breaks down what actually protects a finish long-term: a disciplined plaster startup, stable water chemistry, and the trends that quietly destroy surfaces—especially pH drift, scaling, and recurring “white residue” issues that may be efflorescence, not scale.

    We also step back to the build itself: why a watertight shell matters, how shotcrete placement and permeability influence mineral movement, and how mix discipline—including water-to-cement ratio—affects long-term durability in real-world conditions.

    You’ll learn why saltwater can feel “softer,” why that often comes down to control during startup, and how to make standards-based decisions before signing a contract or considering a conversion.

    Educational only. Not legal advice. Not a substitute for an on-site evaluation. Always follow manufacturer and startup guidance, and test your water regularly.

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    15 mins
  • Sure—Anyone Can DIY a Pool Pump. That’s the Problem.
    Jan 18 2026

    Every pool pad has that rusty metal time clock hanging near the pump—sometimes “weatherproofed” with an upside-down ice cream bucket. That little box is the birthplace of more bad advice than almost anything else in the pool industry, because it trained homeowners to chase “minimum hours” instead of water quality and system safety.

    In this episode, Jason Davies (CPC1460695) explains why pump runtime advice is often superstition, how modern efficiency standards changed the equipment market, and why a pump swap isn’t a casual handyman job—especially on the suction side.

    You’ll learn the real difference between Variable Speed (VS) and Variable Speed & Flow (VSF) pumps, why “slower and longer” can outperform “fast and short,” and how suction outlet safety ties directly into responsible pump selection and installation.

    Key topics:

    • Why time clocks created bad pump-runtime habits
    • Variable Speed vs Variable Speed & Flow (gas pedal vs cruise control)
    • Why filtration + mixing matter as much as sanitizer
    • Florida residential code anchors referencing suction/pressure velocity and entrapment protection standards
    • Why “worst-case full speed” matters even if you plan to run low RPM
    • Remodel touchpoints: replaster, liner replacement, drain covers, and why safety components aren’t “trim”

    Disclaimer: This episode is general education and not legal advice. Codes and enforcement vary by jurisdiction. Always follow manufacturer instructions and local requirements.

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    13 mins