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Ohio HVAC Authority

The Ohio HVAC Authority provider network catalogs heating, ventilation, air conditioning, and refrigeration service providers, contractors, and related professionals operating under Ohio's licensing and regulatory framework. This page defines the criteria used to include providers, explains how the provider network is structured and maintained, and identifies the boundaries of what this resource covers. Professionals, property owners, and researchers using this provider network will find its scope limited to Ohio-regulated HVAC activity — a deliberate constraint that makes its classifications reliable and consistent.

Ohio's HVAC sector is governed primarily by the Ohio Construction Industry Licensing Board (OCILB) under the Ohio Revised Code (ORC) Chapter 4740, which establishes licensing categories, examination requirements, and enforcement authority for heating, ventilation, air conditioning, and refrigeration contractors. The Ohio HVAC licensing requirements framework distinguishes between contractor classifications including HVAC Type I and Type II, refrigeration contractors, and specialty mechanical work — each with distinct examination, insurance, and bonding obligations documented at Ohio HVAC contractor bonds and insurance. Mechanical permits and inspections are administered at both the state and local level, with the Ohio Building Code (OBC) — enforced by the Ohio Board of Building Standards — setting minimum standards for equipment installation, ductwork, and ventilation in residential and commercial structures.

Standards for Inclusion

Providers in this network are evaluated against a defined set of criteria tied to Ohio's licensing and regulatory structure. A provider must meet at least one of the following conditions to qualify for inclusion:

Contractors whose licenses are classified under Ohio plumbing or electrical boards — rather than OCILB — are not verified here, even where their work overlaps with mechanical systems. Those professionals fall under separate licensing authority.

How the Provider Network Is Maintained

The provider network draws classification data from OCILB's publicly accessible license verification records and cross-references local municipal registration databases where available. Providers are not self-submitted without verification; every entry is compared against at least one named public licensing record before publication.

Maintenance cycles account for the OCILB's license renewal schedule — Ohio HVAC contractor licenses renew on a biennial basis. Providers flagged for expired license status are removed or marked pending verification until a current license record is confirmed. Changes in business name, ownership structure, or service territory that affect licensing status are reflected when the corresponding public record is updated.

The Ohio HVAC inspection standards and Ohio mechanical permit process pages provide the regulatory context used to classify contractor competency categories within providers. Safety classifications within the network reference ASHRAE Standard 15 (Safety Standard for Refrigeration Systems) and NFPA 54 (National Fuel Gas Code) as baseline documents for equipment-related providers.

What the Provider Network Does Not Cover

The following are explicitly outside this provider network's scope:

The Ohio residential HVAC requirements and Ohio commercial HVAC requirements pages define which installation and service tasks trigger licensing and permitting obligations under Ohio law, providing a reference boundary for what qualifies as regulated HVAC work.

Relationship to Other Network Resources

This provider network operates as a structured, classification-based provider resource within a broader set of Ohio HVAC reference materials. It is designed to function alongside — not duplicate — pages covering regulatory substance. The Ohio HVAC code and regulations page addresses the OBC mechanical provisions, ASHRAE energy standards, and Ohio EPA requirements that form the compliance backdrop for contractors verified here. The Ohio climate zones and HVAC design page establishes the geographic design parameters — Ohio spans IECC Climate Zones 4A and 5A — that affect equipment selection and load calculation standards referenced in contractor qualifications.

Provider Network providers are geographically organized to reflect Ohio's regional HVAC market structure. The Ohio HVAC systems in local context page supports searches tied to specific metropolitan areas, counties, or service regions within the state. Professionals seeking information on workforce pathways and apprenticeship programs will find that scope addressed separately at Ohio HVAC workforce and training, which covers apprenticeship standards under the Ohio State Apprenticeship Council and related trade association programs — none of which are replicated within the network's provider data.

This site is part of the Trade Services Authority network.

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References


The law belongs to the people. Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, 590 U.S. (2020)

Laws & Codes

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  • 98-3039 Notice of Availability for Information for States on Developing Affordability Criteria for Drinking Water · source
  • 98-2193 Outer Continental Shelf (OCS) Civil Penalties · source
  • 97-34227 Environmental Impact Statements; Notice of Availability · source
  • 98-9636 Draft Guidance for Industry: Guide to Minimize Microbial Food Safety Hazards for Fresh Fruits and Vegetables; Availability · source
  • 98-1490 Issuer Delisting; Notice of Application to Withdraw From Listing and Registration; (Hawaiian Electric Industries, Inc., Common Stock, Withou · source
  • 98-9795 RD Instruments Inc.; Proposed Cooperative Research and Development Agreement (CRADA) Negotiations · source
  • 98-4659 Notice of Termination of Investigation · source
  • 98-4258 Distribution of Risk Disclosure Statements by Futures Commission Merchants and Introducing Brokers · source
  • 98-5784 Submission for OMB Review; Comment Request · source
  • 98-1821 In the Matter of COA, Inc., a Corporation; Provisional Acceptance of a Settlement Agreement and Order · source

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