Your Swimming Pool Was Their Science Experiment
TL;DR: The Receipts
- WHO: Pool Water Products Inc., based in Phoenix, Arizona.
- WHAT: Caught selling and distributing unregistered pesticides nationwide under the name “ALL Clear 3” Jumbo Chlorinating Tablets.” The product they sold was made in China, not the approved, US-made version consumers thought they were buying.
- WHEN: The Arizona Department of Agriculture first issued a stop-sale order in 2018. The EPA followed with a nationwide order. The settlement was announced on February 6, 2020.
- THE PRICE TAG: Fined $800,000 for violating federal pesticide laws.
The Non-Financial Ledger
This is about a fundamental violation of trust. Families across the country bought a product to keep their swimming pools clean and safe for their children. They trusted the label. They trusted the system of regulation designed to protect them. Pool Water Products Inc. shattered that trust for profit. They secretly swapped out the EPA-vetted, American-made formula for an unregistered version from China. No one knew what was in it. No one knew if it was safe or effective. Every family that used “ALL Clear” was part of an involuntary, unregulated chemical trial. The trauma isn’t in a single event, but in the slow-burning realization that you, your children, and your pets were exposed to unknown chemicals, all because a company wanted to make more money on a fraudulent product.
Legal Receipts
An EPA Director didn’t mince words. This is the official government statement on the risk Pool Water Products exposed people to.
“Unregistered pesticides can pose a significant risk to consumers, children, pets, and others. This settlement emphasizes how critical it is for companies to follow federal pesticide laws to protect human health.”
Societal Impact Mapping
Public Health
This is the most direct impact. The entire purpose of the Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act (FIFRA) is to ensure pesticides sold in the U.S. are properly labeled and do not pose an unreasonable risk to human health or the environment. By selling an unregistered product, Pool Water Products bypassed this critical safety check. Consumers were handling and swimming in a chemical cocktail whose formulation and production data had not been reviewed by the EPA. This is a direct and reckless endangerment of public health on a national scale.
Environmental Degradation
Pesticides, especially pool chemicals, eventually find their way into the broader environment through splashing, backwashing, or improper disposal. An unregistered product from an unvetted facility in China could contain contaminants or break down into unknown, harmful byproducts, posing a risk to local water tables, wildlife, and ecosystems that was never assessed by U.S. regulators.
Economic Inequality
This is a story of supply-chain fraud. The company likely sourced the Chinese product because it was cheaper, boosting their profit margins at the direct expense of consumer safety. They sold a product masquerading as a legitimate, regulated good. This deception harms honest businesses that follow the law and pay the costs of compliance, while the consumer gets a product of unknown quality and risk. The company gambled with public health to gain an unfair market advantage.
The “Cost of a Life” Metric
What Now?
An $800,000 fine is substantial, but it came only after state and federal regulators stepped in. The system worked, but it requires constant pressure.
- CORPORATE WATCHLIST: Pool Water Products Inc. The document states they are “now in compliance,” but their history of deception demands scrutiny of all their products.
- REGULATORY WATCHLIST: The EPA and U.S. Customs and Border Protection. How did an unregistered pesticide get imported and distributed nationwide? This case proves the need for stronger inspections and enforcement at our ports to stop dangerous products before they reach store shelves.
- GRASSROOTS RESISTANCE: Check for an EPA Registration Number (EPA Reg. No.) on all chemical products you buy. It is your right to have a product that has been federally reviewed. Report suspicious or unlabeled products to your state’s department of agriculture and the EPA. Your vigilance is the first line of defense against corporate fraud.
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