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Swimming pools should be fun. However drowning is the leading cause of death in Queensland for children aged one to four years. Supervision of kids and teaching them to swim at a young age can save lives. Effective pool fencing also helps keep kids safe. This is why new pool safety laws have been introduced. Stage 1 of the new pool safety laws was introduced on 1 December 2009 and applies to new residential pools. The final stage, stage 2, commenced on 1 December 2010 and mostly affects existing swimming pools.
There is now one pool safety standard, the Queensland Development Code Mandatory Part 3.4 ( What the pool safety laws mean for meUnder the new swimming pool safety laws:
If a building such as a home, unit or hotel room is within the pool fence perimeter, it needs to be fenced from the pool. This includes buildings with living areas such as games rooms. Toilet facilities and change rooms may be located within the pool area, but these structures must not provide a thoroughfare into the pool enclosure from outside. When the new pool safety standard has to be metPool owners have until 30 November 2015 to comply with the new pool safety standards, or earlier if their property is sold or leased before then. If you are selling a property with a non-shared pool on or after 1 December 2010, such as pools for houses or townhouses or units with their own pool or spa:
If you are leasing your property, a pool safety certificate must be obtained before entering into the lease. If you are selling or entering into an accommodation agreement (e.g. lease, hotel stay etc.) for a property with a shared pool associated with short-term accommodation, such as hotels, motels, backpackers or hostels, you have a six month phase-in period to obtain a pool safety certificate. If you are selling or entering into an accommodation agreement for units and townhouses with a shared pool or spa, there is a two year phase-in period to obtain a pool safety certificate. New swimming poolsAll new swimming pools require a building development approval. For new swimming pools:
The building certifier, either a private building certifier or a local government building certifier, who approved the building approval must inspect and certify the pool safety barrier before the pool is filled to a depth of 300 millimetres or more. For inspection and certification costs, check with the building certifier who approved the application to allow the pool and safety barrier to be constructed. The fee may have been incorporated in the building development application fees. Pool safety forms
Form 23 Pool safety certificate (
Form 36 Notice of no pool safety certificate ( For additional pool safety forms. More information
The new pool safety laws were introduced as a result of the most comprehensive review of Queensland's swimming pool safety laws ( |
| Last Updated on Thursday, 10 November 2011 14:50 |