The Roofing Authority Network: Structure, Mission, and Scope

The National Roof Authority serves as the hub for a 26-member network of state- and sector-specific roofing reference sites covering the United States. This page describes the network's architecture, the role of its member properties, the regulatory landscape each member navigates, and the criteria that define network scope. Roofing is a regulated trade touching building codes, occupational safety standards, contractor licensing, and environmental compliance — this network maps that terrain at both the national and state level.

Definition and scope

The roofing sector in the United States encompasses residential, commercial, and industrial roof systems — including installation, repair, replacement, inspection, and maintenance. Regulatory authority over roofing is distributed across federal agencies, state licensing boards, and local building departments. The International Building Code (IBC) and International Residential Code (IRC), published by the International Code Council (ICC), provide the model frameworks that most jurisdictions adopt, though state-specific amendments create substantial variation across all 50 states.

The National Roof Authority network addresses that variation directly. The network overview at the hub index establishes the scope of the full 26-member structure. Member sites are organized primarily by state, each functioning as a jurisdiction-specific reference on licensing requirements, climate zone considerations, permitting procedures, and contractor qualification standards. The full regulatory framework governing roofing practice is detailed in the regulatory context for roofing section, which covers applicable federal standards from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) alongside state-level code adoption status.

The network spans 4 primary climate zone categories as defined by the U.S. Department of Energy's Building America Program — hot-humid, mixed-humid, cold, and hot-dry — each generating distinct material specification and code compliance requirements.

How it works

The network operates on a hub-and-spoke model. The National Roof Authority functions as the central reference point for national standards, federal regulatory context, and cross-state comparisons. Each of the 26 member sites addresses a specific state or functional domain, publishing reference content calibrated to local licensing boards, local code adoptions, and regional climate conditions.

Member sites are not directories of contractors. Each functions as a structured reference resource covering the professional landscape of roofing in its jurisdiction. The network standards and quality criteria govern what each member site publishes and how content accuracy is maintained. Selection criteria for member inclusion are documented at how member sites are selected.

Two functional members extend beyond state scope:

State-level members each address the specific licensing board structure, continuing education requirements, and code adoption timeline for their jurisdiction. For example:

Common scenarios

The network addresses four principal use-case categories:

  1. Contractor qualification research — determining what licenses, bonds, and insurance requirements apply in a specific state before hiring or before a contractor operates across state lines.
  2. Code compliance navigation — identifying which version of the IBC or IRC a jurisdiction has adopted, and what local amendments modify standard provisions.
  3. Permitting and inspection mapping — understanding when a building permit is required for roofing work (replacement versus repair thresholds vary by jurisdiction) and what inspection stages apply.
  4. Storm and disaster recovery — understanding FEMA Public Assistance program intersections, insurance documentation requirements, and contractor fraud provisions that activate after declared disasters.

State members that see the highest volume of storm-related research include:

Additional state members address distinct regulatory environments:

Smaller or regionally distinct jurisdictions are equally covered:

Decision boundaries

The network's scope is reference information about the professional roofing sector — not contractor referrals, not legal advice, and not insurance claim advocacy. Three clear boundaries define what this network covers versus what it does not:

Licensing reference vs. legal interpretation — Member sites document what licensing boards require; they do not interpret whether a specific contractor's credentials satisfy those requirements in a dispute context. That determination rests with the relevant state licensing authority.

Code citation vs. engineering specification — Network content references code sections from the IBC, IRC, ASCE 7 (Minimum Design Loads for Buildings), and ASTM standards. It does not substitute for project-specific engineering analysis, which requires a licensed professional under state practice acts.

National framework vs. local variance — The hub addresses national standards bodies and federal agency frameworks (OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart Q, which governs roofing in construction). State member sites address local adoptions. Neither level addresses hyperlocal municipal amendments, which must be verified with the authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) in each project location.

The network coverage map displays current member coverage by state. The member directory provides direct access to all 26 member properties with jurisdiction summaries.


References