SWIMMING pool and spa owners on the Mornington Peninsula have until Monday 1 June to register them with the council or they could be liable to fines of up to $1652.

This follows the implementation of state laws to improve pool and spa safety throughout Victoria which came into effect last December.

In Victoria, 27 children under five have drowned over the past 20 years – mostly in private pools and spas. The state coroner found that in at least 20 of these cases the safety barrier was non-compliant, and that this was likely to have played a role in their deaths.

There are a “known” 17,000 pools and spas on the peninsula – reportedly the second highest of any other Australian municipality.

Former mayor Cr David Gill last week said the shire had mailed out two reminders of the approaching registration deadline to pool owners – one late last year and the latest in the past few weeks.

The laws apply to pools and spas more than 30cm deep and include above ground and temporary pools and spas, but not small children’s inflatable pools.

Social media sites, such as WTF Mount Eliza, lit up at the weekend with reports of bogus private building inspectors cold-calling panicked pool owners and quoting fees of $1000-$1500 for first-time inspections. Extra callouts would cost extra.

The reports prompted Frankston Council mayor Cr Sandra Mayer to warn that the “confusing and stressful” calls had been made by companies “falsely claiming to represent council”.

Notifying Mornington Peninsula Shire of a pool or spa and paying a $31.84 registration fee is the first step in the compliance process. Owners will then be told the date they need to have their first certificate of pool barrier compliance issued by a registered building surveyor or building inspector.

Owners must arrange the private inspections and then lodge the certificate with the shire by the due date. The News spoke to three registered building inspectors who quoted $300-$395 for an initial inspection and $150-$165 for subsequent inspections.

Owners of pools and spas built before 1 June 2020, with an unknown construction date, will be charged a search fee of $47.24. Those with pools and spas built after 1 June 2020 must register within 30 days of receiving their occupancy permit or certificate of final inspection.

If an inspector identifies a safety issue, owners will have 60 days to rectify the fault and make their pools compliant.

Owners of pools and spas built before 30 June 1994 must lodge a certificate of barrier compliance by 1 June 2021; those built 1 July 1994-1 May 2010 by 1 June 2022, and those built 1 May 2010-31 May 2020 by 1 June 2023.

Certificates must be lodged with the shire every four years.

The onus of registration is on the owner of a property – not a tenant. Tenants unsure if a pool or spa is registered should contact their property manager.

The shire says its role is to maintain a register of pools and enforce non-compliance. It does not offer pool and spa inspections and is not affiliated with any providers of this service.

Planning and building director David Bergin said any provider claiming to be affiliated with or endorsed by the council was “giving the pool owner misinformation”.

Shire officers will only inspect pools to confirm that they have been decommissioned.

First published in the Southern Peninsula News – 19 May 2020

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