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1 According to the CDC, as the CPO, what is the correct immediate response to a
solid stool fecal incident?
Scenario: You operate a 120,000-gallon pool. Hourly chemical tests show: Total
Available Chlorine 1.6 ppm | Free Available Chlorine 1.5 ppm | pH 7.4. A solid
stool fecal incident has occurred.
A Continue operating the pool and monitor chlorine levels hourly
B Superchlorinate to 10 ppm and reopen after 4 hours
C Clear the pool and raise the free chlorine to 2 ppm - Correct Answer:
D Add sodium carbonate and retest after 30 minutes
CDC guidelines for a solid stool fecal incident require: (1) close the pool
immediately, (2) raise free chlorine to 2 ppm (if not already at that level), (3)
maintain pH 7.5 or lower, and (4) ensure a contact time of at least 25 minutes
before reopening. At 1.5 ppm FAC, the pool must be raised to 2 ppm.
2
How much sodium hypochlorite is needed to raise the free chlorine from 1.5 ppm
to 5 ppm?
,Scenario: Same 120,000-gallon pool. Your local health department requires free
chlorine to be raised to 5 ppm. Current free chlorine is 1.5 ppm. You are using
sodium hypochlorite.
STEP-BY-STEP SOLUTION
Step 1: Increase needed: 5.0 − 1.5 = 3.5 ppm
Step 2: Dosage for sodium hypochlorite (12.5%): 1 ppm per 10,000 gal ≈ 0.1 gal of
12.5% NaOCl
Step 3: Pool volume = 120,000 gal
Step 4: Amount per ppm = 120,000 ÷ 10,000 × 0.1 = 1.2 gal per ppm
Step 5: Total = 1.2 gal × 3.5 ppm = 3.5 gallons (rounding per CPO handbook)
✓ Answer: 3.5 gallons of sodium hypochlorite
Using CPO handbook dosage charts: raising 120,000 gallons by 3.5 ppm requires
approximately 3.5 gallons of sodium hypochlorite (at ~12.5% strength). Always
verify using the manufacturer's label and local health department requirements.
3. What is the most likely cause of chlorine odor and eye irritation in an indoor
pool?
Scenario: You are CPO for an indoor health club pool. The facility manager reports
a strong chlorine odor and multiple member complaints of eye irritation.
A Low free chlorine levels allowing bacterial growth
B Excessive sunscreen and body oils in the water
C High levels of chloramines in the pool - Correct Answer:
D Overly alkaline pH above 8.0
The classic signs of chloramine buildup are a strong 'chlorine' smell and eye/skin
irritation — despite chlorine being present. Chloramines (combined chlorine) form
, when free chlorine reacts with nitrogen compounds (urine, sweat, body oils).
Ironically, the odor indicates insufficient free chlorine, not too much.
4
How do you determine the level of chloramines in pool water?
A Use an OTO test kit and read the color change directly
B Test for combined chlorine using a specialty test kit
C Test for total chlorine and free chlorine, then subtract: Total Chlorine − Free
Chlorine = Combined Chlorine (Chloramines) - Correct Answer:
D Use an ORP meter to measure oxidation potential
Combined chlorine (chloramines) = Total Available Chlorine − Free Available
Chlorine. This calculation requires a DPD test kit that measures both total and free
chlorine separately. Chloramine levels above 0.2 ppm are considered a problem
requiring corrective action (breakpoint chlorination).
5
What is the level of chloramines (combined chlorine) in this pool?
Scenario: You operate a 45,000-gallon indoor pool. Tests show: Total Available
Chlorine 2.2 ppm | Free Available Chlorine 1.4 ppm | pH 7.6.
STEP-BY-STEP SOLUTION
Step 1: Combined Chlorine = Total Available Chlorine − Free Available Chlorine
Step 2: = 2.2 ppm − 1.4 ppm
Step 3: = 0.8 ppm combined chlorine (chloramines)
✓ Answer: 0.8 ppm chloramines (combined chlorine)