The last thing you want to do when you
come home after a long hectic day is clean the leaves out of your swimming pool
or push it back down because it has abruptly risen 3 feet above ground level.
That's the predicament Jessica Pedraza and her husband found themselves in when
they returned to their Brandon, Fla., home and discovered their in-ground pool,
which they had just drained the previous day, was jutting out of the dirt. The
suspected culprit is one of the sinkholes that Florida has reluctantly become
famous for.
Worse than having to figure out how to
shove that pool back in there is the fact that the Jessica Pedraza insurance
likely won't cover the damage, citing an "exclusions" section that
doesn't take care of "water below the surface of the ground which exerts
pressure on a swimming pool or other structure. The cost to fix the damage is
estimated to be in the tens of thousands of dollars. Silver pool lining: At
least it didn't happen on either one of their birthdays.