• Before Your Pool Builder Buys a Private Jet With Your Deposit
    2025/12/08

    In this short episode, Jason records from a Florida beach and explains why a simple 15-minute paid consultation can make a huge difference before your pool project goes sideways.

    If you’re worried about scams, half-finished jobs, or a “licensed” contractor who suddenly goes quiet, a focused consult lets you:

    • Run a line from your contract past a licensed pool professional
    • Sanity-check quotes, scopes of work, and change orders
    • Talk through what should be done at this stage of your project
    • Learn how to document what’s been done (and what hasn’t) from a contractor’s point of view

    Jason also shares how his work as a litigation consultant and expert witness shapes the way he looks at documentation and communication—while staying strictly in the lane of technical, practical pool guidance.

    This episode is not legal advice and Jason is not acting as your attorney. It’s a chance to get clear, code-aware input from a licensed pool contractor so you can talk with your own professionals more confidently.

    📅 Book a 15-minute paid consultation:
    https://www.poolenvywi.com/schedule-pool-service-florida-safety-check-or-full-inspection-pool-envy/

    (If you’re listening the week this airs and you’re in Florida, Jason may also have limited availability for in-person consultations—reach out through the schedule page for details.)

    Licensed in Florida as a Certified Pool Contractor: CPC1460695 Texas: TICL 1350 Wisconsin: 012100046 - DC

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    8 分
  • Certified vs Licensed: They Said They Were Licensed… But They Lied
    2025/12/02

    Certified vs Licensed: They Said They Were Licensed… But They Lied – They Were Only Certified

    In this episode, Jason pulls apart one of the pool industry’s favorite magic tricks: calling a certification a “license” and hoping homeowners don’t know the difference. We walk through what a true state license is, what a certification actually means, and how contractors, realtors, and even insurance adjusters get burned when they treat those words like they’re interchangeable.

    We talk about how Florida, Texas, and Wisconsin handle licensing, why permits and insurance often don’t mean what people think they mean, and how shady advertising (“licensed & insured!” with no number in sight) skirts the edge of unlicensed activity.

    If you own a pool, sell homes, adjust claims, or work in the trades, this episode will give you a simple filter: who’s legally allowed to touch that pool, and who’s just really good at printing business cards.

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    14 分
  • Your Unlicensed Pool Contractor Secretly Hates You – The Fast Track to a Lawsuit
    2025/11/25

    Your Unlicensed Pool Contractor Secretly Hates You – The Fast Track to a Lawsuit

    In this episode of The Pool Envy Podcast, Jason digs into what really happens when you trust “the pool guy” who isn’t actually licensed—and why that decision can quietly put you on the fast track to a lawsuit.

    This isn’t just contractor drama. It’s about:

    • How unlicensed work quietly shifts all the risk onto you as the homeowner
    • Why the “He’s been doing this for 30–50 years and nothing’s ever gone wrong” line is a trap
    • What happens when a bad gas or electrical install leads to a fire or shock and damages your neighbor’s property
    • How skipping a permit can give your insurance company a perfect excuse to deny or reduce a claim
    • Why the “we’ll just pay the fine if we get caught” mindset falls apart when you factor in resale, rework, and legal costs

    Jason also tackles some of the biggest myths he hears from homeowners:

    • “If I pull a permit, my property taxes will go up.”
    • “It’s cheaper to ask forgiveness later.”
    • “The inspector is just there to slow me down.”

    He explains how permits and inspections actually work in your favor—acting like a discounted “expert double-check” on your project. You still get to DIY or choose your contractor, but you’re not flying blind.

    On the public/commercial side, Jason talks about:

    • School districts and public entities hiring unlicensed folks—knowingly or “accidentally”
    • What that means for taxpayers, kids’ safety, and liability when something goes wrong
    • Why insisting on licensed contractors and permitted work is good governance, not bureaucracy

    Along the way, you’ll hear some familiar soundbites—like “It’s still illegal” and a playful jab at unlicensed scumbags—plus a few jokes about code books that can’t complain because, well… they’re books.

    By the end of this episode, you’ll know:

    • The real-world consequences of hiring unlicensed pool contractors
    • How permits, inspections, and licensed pros protect your house, your wallet, and your neighborhood
    • The simple questions you can ask before hiring anyone to touch your pool, gas, or electrical systems
    • How you, quietly, become the local hero by raising the bar in your community

    Please see the video/podcast description for more information.
    We’ll include links to:

    • State license lookup tools
    • Local permitting resources
    • A quick “Before You Hire” checklist you can use with any contractor

    🔹 Free Download – Before You Hire Contractor Checklist (PDF)
    Use this one-page checklist before you let anyone touch your pool, gas, or electrical systems:

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    15 分
  • Your Pool Looks Safe — Until the Insurance Claim Is Denied
    2025/11/18

    Most pools look fine… until something happens and the insurance company shows up.
    Then suddenly the “perfect” backyard becomes a liability map.

    In this episode, Jason breaks down a real-world scenario he sees over and over again: beautiful pools that hide dangerous code violations, old components, missing bonding, gas-line mistakes, bad drain covers, and zero documentation.

    And when a homeowner files a claim?
    Five minutes later—denied.

    You’ll learn:

    • What adjusters actually look for when they step into a backyard
    • The five red flags that instantly kill claims
    • Why bonding, grounding, and drain covers matter more than tile and water color
    • How bad gas-line installs quietly void coverage
    • Why “my pool guy said it’s fine” is not evidence
    • The three photos every pool owner should take today
    • The exact questions to ask your insurance agent before summer

    This episode isn’t about fear.
    It’s about seeing your pool the way the experts do—so you don’t get blindsided when it matters.

    If you know someone with a backyard pool… send this to them.

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    7 分
  • Avoiding Pool Contractor Scams in Florida
    2025/11/11

    Florida Pool Contractor Deposits: Don’t Pay & Pray

    Summary: Too many Florida pool projects stall after a big deposit. This episode gives homeowners (and honest builders) a clear, statute-anchored playbook: the 30-day permit / 90-day start clocks, how to verify a real DBPR CPC license, the red flags before you pay, and exactly how to file complaints if the job goes quiet. Paper over promises—always.

    What you’ll learn

    • Florida’s over-10% deposit rulepermit in 30 days, start within 90 days (unless changed in writing/just cause)
    • The difference between license vs. “certifications” vs. tax paperwork
    • A trust-but-verify checklist: DBPR lookup, recent permits, milestone-based draws, lien releases
    • Red flags that signal trouble before you pay
    • How to write a polite demand, where to file complaints, and when to speak with counsel about Chapter 713 liens
    • Reporting unlicensed contracting to the Florida DBPR.


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    9 分
  • Diesel, Deals & Hydroblast: A Week at Pool Envy (Code-Solid)
    2025/11/04

    This week had range. Jason tracks down a diesel return-line drip on the plaster truck, spends time sharpening the website and comms, lands the most fun project of the year, and explains why November in Wisconsin is the perfect window to hydroblast and set a project up for a fast spring start.

    We keep it big picture, not DIY—how we diagnose, how we communicate with owners and AHJs, and why the method matters more than the tool. You’ll hear how hydroblasting compares to chipping/scarifying, the seasonal logic (subs’ availability, on-site oversight, stormwater compliance), and a clear spring-readiness stack for tile and waterproofing that aligns with ANSI A118.10 (submerged membranes), A118.15 (mortars), A118.7 / A118.3 (grouts), installed per ANSI A108 and TCNA pool details—plus an NEC 680.26 bonding check before finish.

    Owner playbook? We give you five questions to keep projects calm: scope/method, protection, waste handling, schedule/cure, and a photo log that ends arguments before they start. Quiet precision. Licensed. Code-compliant. No drama.

    Safety note: Educational only—fuel systems, electrical, and hydroblasting must be performed by licensed professionals under the AHJ and per OEM/manufacturer instructions.
    Licensing: Wisconsin HVAC Contractor #1543940 · Florida CPC1460695 · Texas TICL 1350 / RAIL 635643.
    CTA: Need a permit-ready plan? Book a Safety & System Evaluation.

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    12 分
  • Pool Heater Pressure & Volume: How Good Looks Under Code
    2025/10/28

    Title: Pool Heater Gas Sizing: Heat Without Headaches
    Summary: Your heater doesn’t run on vibes—it runs on pressure and volume. In this episode we define what “good” looks like under IFGC §402 / NFPA 54 so owners and builders can communicate clearly and avoid the lockout blame game. No DIY here—this is the big picture, outcomes, and documentation you should expect from a licensed pro.

    Safety note: This episode is for education and coordination; all gas work must be performed by licensed professionals under the Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) and per applicable codes and manufacturer instructions.

    Licensing: Wisconsin HVAC Contractor #1543940 · Florida CPC1460695 · Texas TICL 1350 / RAIL 635643. Services are provided under the appropriate license in the state of service.

    What you’ll learn

    • How to align scope to code (IFGC §402 / NFPA 54)
    • The five code-driven checkpoints that keep heaters online
    • Why meters, regulators, and pipe size matter more than “bad boards”
    • How a simple startup manometer log ends most arguments

    Big-picture checklist (non-DIY)

    1. Total connected load listed (current + near-future)
    2. Equivalent length and route sketched
    3. Named table & delivery pressure (code edition, allowable drop)
    4. Utility meter capacity & regulator setpoints confirmed in writing
    5. Manometer readings at startup: static & at-fire with photos

    Codes & references

    • IFGC §402 — Gas Piping Sizing (tables/equations, pressure/drop assumptions)
    • NFPA 54 / ANSI Z223.1 — National Fuel Gas Code (parallel principles)
    • Manufacturer heater manual for required inlet/outlet pressures

    Keywords (for search/SEO)

    pool heater gas sizing, IFGC 402, NFPA 54, gas meter upgrade, 2-psi system, manometer, regulator setpoint, pool heater lockout, BTU load, equivalent length

    Need a plan that passes? Book a Safety & System Evaluation at poolenvywi.com — we map BTUs, meters, regulators, and hand you the documentation your AHJ expects.

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    10 分
  • Ring of Safety: Equipotential Bonding Around Your Pool (NEC 680.26)
    2025/10/21

    Standards & references cited

    • NEC 680.26 intent & scope: equipotential bonding to reduce voltage gradients; overview of (B)(1)–(7).
      ECM Web
    • NEC 680.26(B)(2) perimeter surfaces: 3 ft zone; 12×12 in copper grid option; four points around conductive shells; note on nonconductive shells.
      Electrical License Renewal+1
    • NEC 680.26(C) pool water bonding: ≥ 9 in² conductive surface in contact with the water.
      Electrical License Renewal
    • NEC 250.8 connection methods for grounding/bonding (listed pressure connectors, exothermic, no solder-dependent joints).
      Mypdh.engineer+1
    • NEC 680.7 (grounding & bonding terminals): terminals/lugs identified for wet/corrosive locations; many marked “direct burial/DB.”
      Electrical License Renewal
      Note: Local adoption cycles vary (e.g., some jurisdictions are on 2020 NEC). Always check your AHJ’s currently enforced edition.
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    7 分