Yes Lifeguards are required, it is suggested that there is one lifeguard for every 25 people.
Not sure of other countries in the UK, however for England and Wales the age requirement is 16 for both beach and pool lifeguards.
by the pool
So that they can see out far into the ocean. And in a pool- so that the glare of sunlight or lighting is reduced on the surface which enables lifeguards to see to he bottom of the pool. The standard height is 2 metres of the ground.
In the US there is no requirement that you are tried by a jury of your peers. The only requirement in that regard is that the jury pool (from which the petit jury is selected) be drawn from a fair cross section of the community.
The noun 'community pool', an open spaced compound noun, a common noun, a word for any community pool. A proper noun would be the name of a specific community pool, for example Springfield Community Pool or Wentworth Community Pool.
Chlorine can be used in a residential pool. You can find more information at www.apsp.org/clientresources/documents/ResChem.pdf
And the answer is well in the U.K you see lifeguards with the nplq qualification at a swimming pool or leisure centre with water facilities and you also see beach lifeguards at the beach who protect bathers from injury and or death at the coast.
In many places, it is a legal requirement to have a fence around a pool for safety reasons.
Yes, the noun 'community pool', an open spaced compound noun, a common noun, a word for any community pool. A proper noun would be the name of a specific community pool, for example Springfield Community Pool.
The term community pool is a common noun, unless used in the name of a specific community pool or company such as Community Pool Service, Inc. in Rockville, MD.
OSHA would apply to those who build the pool and those employed by the pool (such as lifeguards), but if this is a personal pool, then OSHA really has no application because it is nobody's work place.