Quote Originally Posted by GayleK
How do I get the electrical issue fixed?
What steps do I have an electrician/engineer follow to find the problem with our pool? No rebar or wire was put in our concrete decking before or during the pouring of the concrete. The ground wires are in the couping as far as I know.
How do you get a non-responsive pool company to fix the problem?
HELP, Please!
I do live in a rural area. The pool is vinyl 20x40. Mineral Springs system. Sand filter.
Gayle, you are in a difficult situation. The power company may be able to help with the stray voltage, if the will. Being in a rural area may help in that regard, as they may have some familiarity with stray voltage. As to getting an electrician, good luck. Virtually none of them know anything about pool wiring.

You have two distinct issues that probably aren't related. First, you have a stray voltage issue with your property. Second, your pool installation wasn't properly bonded. If you didn't have both, you wouldn't be aware of either.
Fixing the stray voltage problem won't make your pool any safer, just less annoying. Normally, the low level voltage isn't a safety threat, although if you don't know the source, you can't be sure. The real safety issue is the bonding problem. As easily as it allows the stray voltage to be felt, it could allow you to be electrocuted if something like a backhoe or TV tower or grain auger were to touch a power line and the ground at the same time while someone was in the pool.
The only solution is to connect the deck and the metal of the pool together electrically. There is just no easy way once the concrete is in. If it were my pool, I would consider boring into the concrete from the outside edge to where you can hammer in pieces of rebar horizontally every few feet, and connect the ends with #8 wire and connect that to the bonding wire. I don't think that would meet code, but it might fix it. You'd probably have to dig holes so you could get the drill in place.

Good luck.