Trade Services: Standards and Regulatory Reference

The US trade services sector operates under a layered regulatory framework that spans federal agencies, state licensing boards, local building departments, and private standards organizations. This page provides an overview of the major regulatory bodies, codes, and standards that apply across the trade verticals covered by the Trusted Service Authority division.

Federal Regulatory Frameworks

Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)

OSHA, within the US Department of Labor, sets and enforces workplace safety standards applicable to trade service operations. Key standards include:

OSHA operates through federal enforcement in most states, with 22 states running OSHA-approved state plans that must meet or exceed federal standards.

Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

The EPA administers environmental regulations that directly affect multiple trade verticals:

Department of Transportation (DOT) / FMCSA

The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration regulates commercial vehicle operations relevant to several trade verticals:

Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC)

The CPSC administers product safety standards that intersect with installation and repair trades:

State Licensing Frameworks

Every US state administers its own contractor licensing system. While the specifics vary widely, common elements include:

License Structures

Common Requirements

Variation Across States

The degree of licensing regulation varies significantly:

State licensing boards are the primary reference sources for jurisdiction-specific requirements. Each state-level topic site within the division covers its applicable licensing board in detail.

Industry Codes and Standards

Electrical

Plumbing

Mechanical (HVAC)

Building Construction

Specialty Standards

How Standards Vary by Trade and Jurisdiction

The regulatory environment for any specific trade service depends on the intersection of:

  1. Trade vertical — Each trade has its own primary code (NEC for electrical, UPC/IPC for plumbing, IMC for mechanical)
  2. State adoption — States adopt specific editions of model codes, often with amendments
  3. Local amendments — Cities and counties may adopt further amendments (e.g., Miami-Dade County windborne debris requirements, Chicago's local electrical code)
  4. Project type — Residential, commercial, and industrial projects may fall under different code sections

This jurisdictional variation is why the division maintains separate state-level topic sites: the applicable rules for an HVAC installation in Florida differ materially from those in Oregon, even though both states reference ASHRAE standards and the IMC.

References

Federal Agencies

Standards Organizations

Code and Standard Documents

Licensing Reference

📜 10 regulatory citations referenced  ·  ✅ Citations verified Mar 02, 2026  ·  View update log

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