Web, when a 'damsel in distress' calls, and I can hear it in time, I will answer (to the best of my ability). What I'll do here is recount 3 jobs that I've been on in the past few years where a pool has been severely (more than ~ 1/8" out of level [a LASER level has a +/- 1/16" margin of error]) out of level. I can not criticise a job I've never seen nor the company that did the job, so I'll let you infer what's going on with your pool.
1) A few years ago I personally was responsible for the steps in a pool being ~ 1" higher than the rest of the pool (thankfully the 'rep' option is gone). This wasnt noticed until the pool was backfilled. The fix we made was to excavate the step area (to ~20' either side) and jackhammer out the collar so that we could lower the affected pannels to their proper heigth and repour the collar and rebackfill - all by hand, guess who got to do all the 'drudge work'?
2) Last year, a portion of one of the walls, collar and all (after a week of very heavy rain) sank over an inch, causing the wall to actually buckle (and thereby be ~1 1/2" low at it's lowest) right at the skimmer. Our cure this time was to excavate and cut the 'tops' off of new pannels and attach them to 'recreate' the beam that had failed.
3) Similarly, on a 'rehab' job 3 years ago, the original pool was so badly out of level, we cut new pannels in half and attached them as to raise the entire pool to the level we wanted (they were getting a new deck, so we had the leeway we needed).
The comparitive expense of these, I don't know, but I'm sure none of them are cheep. Talk with your PC and see what he will or can do to correct the situation.
I wish you well, again, with your situation and hope all turns out fine.
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