Certification, Regulation, and Standards Sites: How the Network Covers Professional Compliance

The contractor licensing and compliance landscape in the United States spans more than 50 distinct regulatory jurisdictions, each with independent examination requirements, bond thresholds, insurance mandates, and enforcement mechanisms. This page describes how the National Contractor Authority network structures its coverage of professional compliance topics — including which member sites address certification, regulation, and standards — and where each site sits within the broader reference framework. The National Contractor Authority hub serves as the central reference point connecting 73 state, regional, and specialty member sites organized by geography and contractor type.


Definition and scope

Professional contractor compliance in the United States operates across three distinct regulatory layers: state licensing boards, municipal permit authorities, and federal contractor registration systems such as the System for Award Management (SAM.gov). These layers do not always align — a contractor licensed at the state level may still be required to hold separate municipal endorsements, carry project-specific bonding, or register under federal acquisition regulations (FAR Subpart 9.1) before bidding on public work.

Within this network, certification and regulation coverage is organized into three primary site categories:

  1. Statewide general contractor authority sites — Cover all contractor types operating under a single state's licensing board, including residential, commercial, specialty, and subcontractor classifications.
  2. Commercial contractor authority sites — Focus specifically on the commercial construction sector within a state, where licensing thresholds, bond amounts, and project delivery regulations frequently differ from residential requirements.
  3. Metro and regional contractor authority sites — Address city- or metro-level permitting environments, code adoption status, and local enforcement offices that operate independently of statewide frameworks.

The Certification, Regulation, and Standards Sites index within this network catalogs which member sites fall into each category, their geographic scope, and the specific regulatory bodies they reference.


How it works

Each member site in the network functions as a jurisdiction-specific reference point aligned to the licensing and compliance structure of its named geography. The network standards and criteria define the baseline content expectations for all member sites, including coverage of state licensing board contact information, examination bodies, continuing education requirements, and reciprocity agreements where applicable.

Statewide sites are the primary vehicles for regulation coverage. Examples include:

Commercial-focused sites address the heavier regulatory demands of commercial work, including Davis-Bacon wage compliance on federally funded projects (U.S. Department of Labor, Wage and Hour Division), OSHA 30-hour training requirements, and higher bonding thresholds set by state procurement offices:

Metro and regional sites address submarkets where local code amendments, permit intake processes, and enforcement cultures create compliance conditions distinct from the statewide baseline. The metro and regional member sites section of the network tracks these properties separately.


Common scenarios

The network coverage by state reference page maps which member sites are active for each jurisdiction. The following represents the range of compliance scenarios addressed across the network's statewide members:

Additional statewide members covering regulation and licensing include:

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