Restoration Services Network: Purpose and Scope
The prostormdamage.com restoration services provider network organizes licensed and credentialed contractors, remediation firms, and inspection services across the United States into a structured reference resource for property owners, insurance professionals, and public adjusters navigating post-storm recovery. The provider network applies classification criteria drawn from industry certification bodies, state licensing boards, and federal guidance frameworks to distinguish between provider types and service scopes. Understanding how this provider network is built, what it excludes, and how individual providers are formatted enables accurate interpretation of the information presented. The storm-damage-restoration-services-overview page provides the foundational context for how these services fit into the broader restoration workflow.
How the provider network is maintained
Providers within this network are organized according to publicly verifiable criteria, not paid placement or advertiser relationships. Classification follows the Institute of Inspection, Cleaning and Restoration Certification (IICRC) credential framework, which defines competency standards across water damage restoration (WRT), applied structural drying (ASD), mold remediation (AMRT), and fire and smoke restoration (FSRT), among other disciplines. The storm-restoration-industry-standards-and-certifications page details each credential category.
Provider Network maintenance applies a four-stage classification process:
- Credential verification — Providers are categorized by documented IICRC certifications, state contractor licenses, and where applicable, National Roofing Contractors Association (NRCA) membership or General Contractor (GC) licensing.
- Service scope mapping — Each provider is tagged against a defined taxonomy of restoration service types: structural, mechanical, envelope, interior, and environmental remediation.
- Geographic assignment — Providers are mapped to the states in which they hold active licenses, not simply the states where they operate informally.
- Recency flagging — Providers that have not been confirmed against a live source within 18 months are marked pending review and suppressed from primary search results.
No provider in this network constitutes an endorsement. The provider network does not adjudicate disputes between property owners and contractors, and it does not verify insurance or surety bond status beyond what is publicly filed with a state licensing board.
What the provider network does not cover
The provider network is scoped to post-storm restoration services only. It does not include:
- General construction contractors who do not hold restoration-specific credentials or documented storm-damage project experience
- Public adjusters or claims consultants, who operate under separate state licensing regimes administered by state departments of insurance, not contractor boards
- Emergency utility restoration (power, gas, water main), which falls under utility company jurisdiction and OSHA 29 CFR 1910.269 electrical safety standards
- Environmental abatement for pre-existing conditions not caused by a qualifying storm event — asbestos and lead abatement unrelated to storm exposure are outside scope
- Government disaster relief programs, including FEMA's Individual Assistance program (IA) and the Small Business Administration (SBA) disaster loan program
The distinction between storm-triggered environmental remediation and pre-existing environmental hazards is operationally significant. A contractor certified under EPA Renovation, Repair, and Painting (RRP) rules may appear in this network if the RRP credential accompanies an IICRC water damage or mold remediation certification and the engagement involves storm-caused lead or asbestos disturbance. RRP certification alone is not a qualifying criterion.
The provider network also does not cover preventive measures and storm-proofing services performed prior to storm events, even when delivered by the same firms verified here.
Relationship to other network resources
The provider network functions as the operational layer of a broader reference structure. Two resources provide essential context for interpreting provider network content:
The restoration-services-topic-context page explains the regulatory environment governing storm restoration, including state contractor licensing reciprocity, the role of IICRC S500 (Standard for Professional Water Damage Restoration), and how FEMA disaster declarations affect contractor demand and documentation requirements in affected counties.
The iicrc-standards-in-storm-restoration page maps specific IICRC standards — S500 for water, S520 for mold, S700 for wind-driven rain intrusion — to the service categories used in provider network providers. A provider tagged as qualified for water-intrusion-from-storm-damage-restoration is cross-referenced against S500 and S700 compliance documentation where available.
Topic pages covering damage types — including hail-damage-restoration, flood-and-storm-surge-restoration, and structural-storm-damage-restoration — describe the technical scope of each service category. Readers should consult those pages before using the provider network to confirm that a verified provider's credential set matches the specific damage type present on the property.
How to interpret providers
Each provider in the restoration-services-providers section follows a standardized format presenting five data fields:
- Provider name and primary service state(s) — states verified are those with confirmed active licenses as of the last verification date
- IICRC credential codes — presented as abbreviations (e.g., WRT, ASD, AMRT) with links to credential definitions
- Service taxonomy tags — drawn from the 10-category classification used across this provider network: structural, roof/envelope, interior finish, mechanical, HVAC, environmental/mold, contents, emergency stabilization, documentation/inspection, and debris management
- Residential/Commercial scope indicator — differentiates providers whose licensing and insurance coverage extends to commercial work versus residential-only operations; see the contrast between residential-storm-damage-restoration and commercial-storm-damage-restoration for scope definitions
- Verification status date — the month and year of the most recent credential confirmation
A provider verified with WRT and ASD credentials but without AMRT should not be assumed qualified to perform mold remediation, even if mold is present as a secondary consequence of water intrusion. Credential boundaries follow IICRC's published competency definitions, not general contractor scope claims. The storm-damage-restoration-glossary defines all credential abbreviations and service taxonomy terms used across provider network providers.