A standard Montana contractor license covers a broad range of construction and renovation work. It does not cover everything. When a Billings area contractor takes on work involving asbestos, hazardous chemicals, or other regulated materials, additional licensing and certification requirements apply, and those requirements come with enforcement mechanisms that can affect both the contractor’s license and their ability to work in Montana at all.
Understanding what specialty work triggers additional requirements and how those requirements interact with the base contractor license is part of operating a compliant construction business in Yellowstone County.
What Montana’s Base Contractor License Covers and Doesn’t Cover
Montana’s contractor licensing system, administered by the Montana Department of Labor and Industry, issues construction and independent contractor licenses that authorize general building, engineering, and specialty work within defined parameters. The license tiers are based on contract value, type of construction, and field experience, and they authorize framing, carpentry, demolition, and general construction within their scope.
What the standard license doesn’t authorize is work with specific hazardous materials or in regulated environments that carry additional public health implications. Asbestos, lead-based paint, mold remediation, and certain chemical exposures all trigger requirements that exist separately from the base contractor license.
Asbestos Contractor Licensing in Montana
Asbestos is present in many older Billings area structures, including residential, commercial, and industrial buildings constructed before the 1980s. Contractors performing renovation, demolition, or maintenance work that disturbs asbestos-containing materials must comply with Montana Air Quality regulations administered by the Montana Department of Environmental Quality.
Before disturbing asbestos-containing materials, a Montana contractor must hold a current asbestos contractor license, employ licensed asbestos workers and supervisors, follow specific work practice standards for containment and disposal, and notify the Montana DEQ before beginning work that meets threshold quantities.
Working with asbestos without proper licensure exposes a contractor to regulatory penalties, license suspension, and potential personal liability if workers or building occupants are harmed by improper asbestos handling.
Lead-Based Paint and Other Hazardous Material Requirements
Contractors who disturb lead-based paint in pre-1978 residential properties, schools, or childcare facilities must be certified under the EPA’s Renovation, Repair, and Painting Rule as Renovation, Repair, and Painting (RRP) contractors. Montana has adopted this federal framework, and Billings contractors who do window replacement, siding work, or renovation in older homes must be RRP-certified before disturbing painted surfaces.
Failure to obtain RRP certification or follow required lead-safe work practices can result in EPA enforcement actions with significant civil penalties per violation per day.
How Specialty Licensing Interacts With Insurance and Bonding
Specialty work involving hazardous materials typically requires insurance coverage that specifically covers that category of work. A standard general liability policy may exclude pollution liability, asbestos work, or other hazardous material claims. Billings contractors who take on specialty work without confirming their coverage extends to that work may find themselves personally exposed to claims that arise from a project the insurer considers outside the policy’s scope.
Silverman Law Office, PLLC works with Billings contractors on the legal aspects of contractor licensing compliance, including entity formation, contract documentation, and the regulatory framework that governs specialty work. Reach out to Billings contractor licensing lawyers at Silverman Law Office to discuss your specific scope of work and whether any additional licensing requirements apply to what you’re doing or planning to do.