Current through Reg. 50, No. 187; September 24, 2024
(1) All owners,
managers, lifeguards or swimming instructors in charge of, or working at,
public swimming pools shall be responsible for the supervision and safety of
the pool.
(2) Lifeguard and
Swimming Instructor Requirements.
(a)
Definitions:
1. "Lifeguard" - Person
responsible for the safety of the users of a public swimming pool.
2. "Nationally Recognized Aquatic Training
Program" - A training and certification program for swimming instructors and
lifeguards equivalent to the programs offered by the American Red Cross or the
Y.M.C.A.
3. "Swimming Instructor" -
Person who offers progressive swimming instruction.
(b) Lifeguards or swimming instructors, if
provided, shall be in full charge of persons using the pool and shall have
authority to enforce all rules. Lifeguards and swimming instructors shall be
certified in lifeguarding or swimming instruction, respectively, by the
American Red Cross, the YMCA or other equivalent national aquatic training
agencies which meet the established standards, objectives and standards of care
provided in the American Red Cross or YMCA programs. For the purpose of this
rule, the standards found in the 2007 edition of the American Red Cross
Lifeguarding Instructors Manual, the 2009 edition of the American Red Cross
Water Safety Instructors Manual, the On the Guard, The YMCA Lifeguard Manual,
(2011) Fifth Edition, (YMCA), The Youth and Adult Aquatic Program Manual
(1999), and (YMCA) The Parent/Child and Preschool Aquatic Program Manual
(1999), are hereby adopted by reference, have been deemed copyright protected,
and are available for review at the Department of Health, Bureau of
Environmental Health, 4025 Esplanade Way, Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1710 or at
the Department of State, R.A. Gray Building, 500 South Bronough Street,
Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0250. Swimming instructors of developmentally
disabled students shall also be certified in accordance with Section
514.072, F.S.
(c) Lifeguards and swimming instructors shall
also be currently certified in first aid and in adult, child and infant
cardiopulmonary resuscitation through the American Red Cross, the American
Heart Association, the National Safety Council, the American Academy of
Orthopaedic Surgeons, by Medic First Aid International, Inc., or by American
Safety and Health Institute.
(d)
Swim coaches are exempted from the swimming instructor certification
requirement when training advanced level swimmers for competition.
(e) Verification of equivalence, as required
above, shall be the responsibility of the department. The department shall form
an ad hoc advisory group composed of professionals in the field of aquatics.
This group shall consist of five members and shall make recommendations to the
department regarding the equivalence of lifeguard or swimming instructor
certification programs submitted to the department under paragraph (b), above.
Members shall be appointed for a period of 3 years with such appointments being
staggered so that the terms of no more than two members expire in any one
year.
(f) Lifeguard, swimming
instructor, cardiopulmonary resuscitation and first aid certificates or
photocopies thereof shall be maintained at the pool location and be available
for inspection by department personnel at any reasonable
hour.
(3) Safety
Equipment - All pools shall be equipped with the following:
(a) Safety drain outlet cover(s)/grate(s) and
allowable secondary anti-entrapment devices as required by section
514.0315, F.S.
(b) A shepherd's hook securely attached to a
one piece pole not less than 16 feet in length. Pools over 50 feet in length
shall have a shepherd's hook on each of the longer sides of the pool.
(c) At least one 18 inch diameter lifesaving
ring with sufficient rope attached to reach all parts of the pool from the pool
deck. Pools over 50 feet in length shall have a lifesaving ring on each of the
longer sides of the pool.
(d)
Safety equipment shall be mounted in a conspicuous place and be readily
available for use.
(e) Spa pools
under 200 square feet of surface area, and interactive water features or wading
pools with two feet or less of water depth are exempt from this shepherd's hook
and lifesaving ring requirement.
(4) Safety Lines - All pools with a slope
transition shall maintain safety line anchors and a safety line in place at all
times. A safety line may be temporarily removed from the pool for patrons to
swim laps only when there is a safety attendant or lifeguard present, and it
must be reinstalled to its proper location upon completion of the
exercise.
(5) Pool covers and solar
blankets shall only be used during times when the pool is closed. If a pool
cover or solar blanket is installed, it shall be secured around the entire
perimeter and designed to support a live load of an adult person, or the pool
area shall be inaccessible to unauthorized individuals during times of cover or
blanket use.
(6) Pool Rules and
regulations - Rules for bathers shall be posted as approved by the
jurisdictional building department.
(7) Night swimming - Pools shall not be open
for swimming at night unless lighting is provided as approved by the
jurisdictional building department. Pools authorized for night swimming shall
be noted on the operating permit issued by the department. Night swimming shall
be considered one half hour before sunset to one half hour after
sunrise.
(8) Pools with heaters
shall have a maximum water temperature of 104º F and a functional in-line
thermometer.
(9) General Pool
Maintenance for Patron Safety.
(a) The bathing
load shall be posted and the owner/operator shall not permit the bathing load
to be exceeded at any time.
(b) The
filtration system for swimming pools shall be maintained as capable of meeting
operating performance standards as identified on the most current operating
permit. Flowrate may not be reduced or adjusted after the initial operating
permit is issued unless approved in advance by the department. All other types
of projects shall be maintained as sized according to the anticipated bathing
load and proposed uses.
(c) Access
- All pools shall be maintained with a means of access as approved by the
jurisdictional building department.
(10) General Equipment Maintenance for Safety
-
(a) Recirculation and treatment equipment
such as, but not limited to filters, recessed automatic surface skimmers,
ionizers, ozone generators, UV systems, automatic controllers, disinfection
feeders and chlorine generators must be tested and approved using the NSF/ANSI
Standard 50-2012. The standard and a list of certified products is available
from
www.NSF.org, and product certifications
are available from other American National Standards Institute (ANSI) 3rd party
accredited product certifiers. If standards do not exist for a specific
product, the manufacturer should consult NSF or other ANSI accredited product
certifier to develop such standards.
(b) The recirculation system shall be
operated to maintain a minimum of four turnovers of the pool volume per day
(once per 6 hours). Pools that are less than 1000 square feet at health clubs
are required to provide eight turnovers per day (once per 3 hours). Other pool
types shall maintain the following minimum pool turnover rate: spa pool - 30
minutes; IWF - 30 minutes; wading pool - 1 hour; water activity pool - 1 hour
in pools two foot deep or less, or 2 hours in pools over two foot deep; zero
depth entry pool - 1 hour in area less than three feet deep; water slide plunge
pool - 2 hours; river ride - 3 hours, and wave pool - 3 hours. Validation of
the turnover rate shall be determined by the rate of the flow
indicator.
(c) For compliance with
Section 514.0315, F.S., and to ensure
the safety of bathers:
1. All safety features
shall be tested and replaced when necessary, in accordance with the
manufacturer's specifications. The operations manual shall be onsite.
2. The owner/operator shall provide a
completed form DH 4157, Pool Owner/Operator Verification of Entrapment Safety
Features, 09/2015, herein incorporated by reference and available at
http://www.flrules.org/Gateway/reference.asp?No=Ref-06898,
to the department when a change in the safety feature occurs.
3. For an existing pool with a suction
limiting vent (SLV) system, the system shall be tested annually by a Chapter
489, F.S., licensed pool contractor or a Florida licensed professional engineer
to validate that the vacuum release timing is in compliance with the criteria
for safety vacuum release systems in Section
514.0315(2)(a),
F.S. A copy of the testing shall be submitted to the department with the annual
operating permit renewal application.
(d) Filters - Filters sized to handle the
required recirculation flow shall be maintained to perform as originally
installed in accordance with the manufacturer's specifications and remain
functional as designed.
1. The maximum
filtration rate in gallons per minute per square foot of filter area shall be:
fifteen (15), or twenty (20) if so approved utilizing the procedure in this
chapter below for high rate sand filters, three (3) for rapid sand filters,
three-hundred-seventy-five thousandths (375/1, 000) for pleated cartridge
filters, and two (2) for Diatomaceous Earth (D.E.) type filters.
2. Pressure filter systems shall be
maintained to perform as originally equipped with a functional air relief
valve, influent and effluent pressure gauges with minimum face size of two
inches reading 0-60 pounds per square inch (psi), and a sight glass when a
backwash line is required.
3.
Vacuum filter systems shall be maintained to perform as originally equipped
with a functional vacuum gauge which has a two inch face and reads from 0-30
inches of mercury.
4. D.E. filter
elements shall be maintained as installed with a minimum one inch clear spacing
between elements. All cartridges used in public pool filters shall be
maintained as permanently marked with the manufacturer's name, pore size and
area in square feet of filter material. All cartridges with end caps shall have
the permanent markings on one end cap. The D.E. filter tank and elements shall
be maintained as installed, such that the recirculation flow draw down does not
expose the elements to the atmosphere whenever only the main drain valve is
open.
(e) Disinfection
and pH adjustment shall be maintained as added to the pool recirculation flow
using automatic feeders meeting the requirement of NSF/ANSI Standard 50-2012.
All chemicals shall be fed into the return line after the pump, heater and
filters, unless the feeder was designed by the manufacturer and approved by the
NSF to feed to the collector tank or to the suction side of the pump. Feeding
chlorinated isocyanurates disinfectant is prohibited in spas, wading pools and
interactive water features. Dual or multiuse feeders can be used if approved
for and feeding an acceptable rate of alternate disinfectant. Where pH
adjustment feeders are not present on these three types of pools that were
required to replace chlorinated isocyanurates feeders, pH adjustment feeders
shall be installed. Exception: spa pools of 100 square feet or less with
original department approval to be built without a pH adjustment feeder.
1. Gas chlorination - When gas chlorination
is utilized, the chlorinator shall be maintained as capable of continuously
feeding a chlorine dosage of six (6) mg/L to the recirculated flow of the
filtration system.
a. Gas chlorinators shall
be maintained in above grade rooms and in areas which are inaccessible to
unauthorized persons.
b. When
booster pumps are used with the chlorinator, the pump shall use recirculated
pool water supplied via the recirculation filtration system. The booster pump
shall be maintained as electrically interlocked with the recirculation pump to
prevent the feeding of chlorine when the recirculation pump is not
operating.
2.
Hypohalogenation and Electrolytic chlorine generators - The hypohalogenation
type feeder and electrolytic chlorine generators shall continuously feed a
dosage of six (6) mg/L to the minimum required turnover flow rate of the
filtration systems. Required backup chlorine feeders and generators shall be
operated at least once per month and this test shall be recorded in the monthly
pool log.
3. Feeders for pH
adjustment - Feeders for pH adjustment shall be provided on all pools. pH
adjustment feeders shall be maintained as positive displacement type, shall be
adjustable from zero to full range, and shall have an electrical interlock with
the circulation pump to prevent discharge when the recirculation pump is not
operating. When soda ash is used for pH adjustment, the maximum concentration
of soda ash solution to be fed shall not exceed one-half pound soda ash per
gallon of water. Feeders for soda ash shall be capable of feeding a minimum of
three gallons of the above soda ash solution per pound of gas chlorination
capacity. The minimum size of the solution reservoirs shall be maintained as
not be less than 50 percent of the maximum daily capacity of the feeder. The
solution reservoirs shall be marked to indicate the contents.
4. Ozone generating equipment -
a. The concentration of ozone in the return
line to the pool shall not exceed 0.1 mg/L.
b. Ozone generating equipment shall be
maintained as equipped with an air flow meter and a means to control the flow.
The generator shall be maintained as electrically interlocked with the
recirculation pump to prevent the feeding of ozone when the recirculation pump
is not operating. A flow sensor controller can also be used to turn off the
feeder when flow is not sensed.
5. UV equipment used for any purpose shall
constantly produce a dosage of at least 40 mJ/cm2 (milliJoules per square
centimeter).
6. Ozone generators
shall produce no more than a pool water contact concentration of 0.1 milligrams
per liter (mg/L). The contact concentration in mg/L shall be calculated as the
amount of ozone in grams per hours divided by the recirculation flow rate in
gallons per minute times 4.41.
(11) Maintenance for Safety of Wading Pools-
(a) Automated Oxidation Reduction Potential
(ORP) and pH controllers with sensing probes shall be maintained to assist in
maintaining proper disinfection and pH levels.
(b) All wading pools shall have drainage to
waste without a cross-connection through a quick opening valve to facilitate
emptying the pool should a fecal accident occur. Should a fecal accident occur,
the requirements of this chapter shall be met or the pool may be drained and
both the pool and the filter system and all plumbing shall be properly
disinfected.
(12)
Maintenance for Safety of Spa Pools-
(a) Oils,
body lotions, and minerals - Oils, body lotions, and minerals or materials not
associated with chemicals used for water chemistry balance, algae control, and
disinfection of the water are prohibited in the spa pool.
(b) Automated Controllers - Automated
Oxidation Reduction Potential (ORP) and pH controllers with sensing probes
shall be provided and maintained on spa pools to assist in maintaining proper
disinfection and pH levels.
(c) Spa
pool signs shall be posted as approved by the jurisdictional building
department.
(d) Should a fecal
accident occur, the requirements of this chapter shall be met or the spa pool
may be drained and both the spa pool and the filter system and all plumbing
shall be properly disinfected.
(13) Maintenance for Safety of Water
Recreation Attractions and Special Purpose Pools - A lifeguard and/or safety
plan shall be submitted to the department with the application for the initial
operation permit of water slide plunge pools and water activity pools when
climbable structures are installed.
(a) Water
slide plunge pools.
1. Pump reservoir volume
minimum shall be equal to three minutes of the combined flow rate in gpm of all
filter and slide pumps.
2. Pump
reservoirs shall be accessible only to authorized individuals.
3. Filter areas minimum requirements shall be
maintained as twice the filter areas specified for the recirculation rates
stipulated for other pools in this chapter and FBC Section 454.1. The
filtration system shall be capable of returning the pool water turbidity to
five-tenths NTU within eight hours or less after peak bather load.
4. Disinfection equipment shall be maintained
as capable of feeding 12 mg/L of halogen to the continuous recirculation flow
of the filtration system.
(b) Water activity pools.
1. The recirculation-filtration system of
water activity pools shall achieve a minimum of one turnover every two hours
for water activity pools over two feet deep, and in one hour for these pools
that are two feet deep or less.
2.
All water activity pool signs shall be posted as approved by the jurisdictional
building department.
(c)
The recirculation-filtration system for zero depth entry pools shall be of a
minimum of one turnover every two hours in the area of the pool that is three
feet deep or less. In the remainder of the pool where the depth is greater than
three feet, the system shall have a maximum six hour turnover rate.
(d) Special purpose pool projects may deviate
from the requirements of other sections of this chapter. Only those deviations
necessary to accommodate the special usage shall be allowed and all other
aspects of the pool shall comply with the requirements of this chapter and the
FBC section 454.1. The operating permit shall state the purpose for which the
pool is to be used.
(e) Interactive
Water Features (IWFs).
1. An automatic skimmer
system shall be maintained if provided in the collector tank. A variable height
skimmer may be used or a custom surface skimmer device may be
substituted.
2. Chemical feeders
shall be maintained as in accordance with this chapter, except that the
disinfection feeder shall be capable of feeding 12 mg/L of free chlorine to the
pressure side of the recirculation system or the collector tank (based upon a
hypothetical 30 minute turnover of the contained volume within the system).
Automated Oxidation Reduction Potential (ORP) and pH controllers with sensing
probes shall be provided to assist in maintaining proper disinfection and pH
levels.
3. Hydraulics.
a. The filter system shall filter and
chemically treat all water that is returned to the spray features. The filter
system shall draft from the collector tank and return filtered water directly
to the spray features. Excess water not required by the spray features shall be
returned to the collector tank.
b.
Alternatively, the contained volume of the system may be filtered and
chemically treated based upon a 30 minute turnover of the contained volume with
100% returned to the collector tank by manifold piping. If this alternative is
chosen, all water returned to the spray feature(s) must also be treated with an
Ultraviolet (UV) light disinfection equipment to accomplish protozoan
destruction in accordance with sound engineering. This alternative must have
the ability to feed 6 mg/L free chlorine to the feature water as it is returned
to the spray feature. The UV disinfection equipment shall be electrically
interconnected such that whenever it fails to produce the required UV dosage,
the water spray features pump(s) and flow will be immediately
stopped.
c. An automatic water
level controller shall be provided.
d. Where the filter system described in
sub-subparagraph 3.a., above, is utilized, a second filter system and
disinfection system shall be provided to treat the water in the collector tank
when the feature/filter pump is not in operation. Said system shall be capable
of filtering the total volume of water in the collector tank in 30 minutes and
the disinfection system shall be capable of providing 12 mg/L of disinfectant
to this flow rate.
4. All
IWF pool rule signs shall be posted as approved by the jurisdictional building
department.
(f) Rules and
regulations for water theme parks shall be posted as approved by the
jurisdictional building department.
Rulemaking Authority 381.006, 514.021, 514.071 FS. Law
Implemented 381.0015, 381.006, 514.021, 514.025, 514.03, 514.031, 514.0315,
514.05, 514.06, 514.071 FS.
New 10-5-93, Formerly 10D-5..134, 10D-5.137, Amended
12-27-98, 5-27-04, 5-24-09, 7-20-16.