Authority Network America

Authority Network America: Plumbing, HVAC & Electrical Coverage Overview

The Authority Network America hub coordinates reference coverage across the licensed home services trades, with three verticals — plumbing, HVAC, and electrical — forming the core of its national scope. This page maps the structure of that coverage, the member sites responsible for each domain, and the criteria that distinguish one service sector from another. Professionals, researchers, and service seekers navigating these trades encounter distinct licensing frameworks, regulatory bodies, and contractor qualification standards depending on the system type involved.


Definition and scope

Plumbing, HVAC, and electrical services represent the three regulated mechanical systems found in virtually every residential and commercial structure in the United States. Each system is governed by a distinct body of codes — the International Plumbing Code (IPC), the International Mechanical Code (IMC) for HVAC systems, and the National Electrical Code (NEC, NFPA 70) for electrical installations — and each requires contractors to hold trade-specific licenses issued at the state level, with 49 states maintaining some form of contractor licensing requirement (NASCLA).

Within the Authority Network America framework, coverage of these three trades is distributed across dedicated member reference sites rather than consolidated into a single property. National Plumbing Authority covers the full scope of plumbing service categories, licensing tiers, and code adoption status across jurisdictions. National HVAC Authority addresses heating, ventilation, air conditioning, and refrigeration systems, including EPA Section 608 certification requirements applicable to any technician handling regulated refrigerants (EPA Section 608). National Electrical Authority documents the NEC adoption cycle, state-level electrical licensing classifications, and the distinction between journeyman, master, and electrical contractor license tiers.

The network's overall provider framework defines how these three verticals interact structurally and how their coverage boundaries are maintained across the hub's member sites.


How it works

Each of the three verticals operates through a dedicated member site that functions as a domain-specific reference authority. The hub site — authoritynetworkamerica.com — connects these properties through a cross-network referral protocol that routes specific service and licensing inquiries to the appropriate member property.

The coverage mechanism follows a vertical-then-jurisdiction structure:

  1. Vertical identification — The service inquiry is classified by system type (plumbing, HVAC, or electrical).
  2. Jurisdiction mapping — State-specific licensing, code adoption, and permit requirements are applied via the member site's reference database.
  3. Contractor qualification check — The relevant member site documents the license class, bonding requirements, and insurance thresholds applicable to the jurisdiction.
  4. Cross-reference routing — When a project spans more than one trade (e.g., a mechanical room renovation requiring all three systems), the member site scope comparison page identifies the appropriate licensing overlap and referral path.

National Contractor Authority plays an integrating role across all three verticals by covering general contractor licensing, subcontractor oversight standards, and the contractual frameworks that govern multi-trade projects. Its scope is distinct from the trade-specific sites: it addresses the contracting layer rather than the technical trade layer.

The standards reference maintained by the hub documents the code editions and adoption dates used as baseline references across all member sites, ensuring that plumbing (IPC/UPC), mechanical (IMC), and electrical (NEC) references remain version-consistent.


Common scenarios

Three structural patterns account for the majority of service-sector navigation across these verticals:

Single-trade residential service — A homeowner requires a licensed plumber to replace a water heater. The inquiry routes to National Plumbing Authority, which documents license requirements for the relevant state, permit obligations, and the distinction between a plumbing contractor license and a plumber's license (the former authorizing business operations; the latter authorizing field work).

Multi-trade new construction — A general contractor coordinating mechanical rough-in on a residential build must engage licensed subcontractors in all three trades. National Contractor Authority documents the subcontractor oversight requirements; the three trade-specific member sites provide the licensing thresholds for each system.

HVAC refrigerant compliance — A commercial property manager scheduling system maintenance must verify that the assigned technician holds EPA Section 608 certification (Type I, II, III, or Universal, depending on refrigerant type and system size). National HVAC Authority documents these certification tiers and their regulatory basis.

The home services vertical summary page provides a comparative view of how these three scenarios distribute across the network's coverage structure.


Decision boundaries

Two primary distinctions govern how inquiries are routed within this coverage area:

Trade scope vs. contractor scope — National Plumbing Authority, National HVAC Authority, and National Electrical Authority each cover trade-specific licensing and technical standards. National Contractor Authority covers the contracting and business-entity layer. A licensed master electrician operating as a sole proprietor and a licensed electrical contractor employing journeymen represent two different regulatory categories — the latter requiring a separate contractor license in most states.

In-network vs. adjacent verticals — The plumbing, HVAC, and electrical grouping is distinct from the network's exterior and structural trades. National Roof Authority covers roofing contractor licensing, material standards, and inspection frameworks — a structurally separate vertical with its own code basis (primarily IRC Chapter 9 and IBC Chapter 15). Similarly, National Pool Authority addresses aquatic system installation and service, which involves plumbing intersections but operates under a distinct licensing category in most jurisdictions (pool contractor vs. plumbing contractor).

The trades vertical summary page maps these boundary distinctions formally, including the states where plumbing licenses extend to pool system work and where separate pool contractor registration is required.

For network membership structure and how member sites maintain qualification under the hub's coverage framework, the network membership criteria and network quality benchmarks pages document the applicable standards.


References

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