Every HVAC contractor in Utah is legally required to carry state licensing through the Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing (DOPL) and to maintain liability insurance and workers’ compensation coverage. The gap between “required by law” and “actually verified” is where homeowners get hurt — financially when an uninsured contractor damages their property, and legally when an unlicensed technician performs work that voids a manufacturer warranty, fails a building inspection, or triggers a code-compliance issue at the time of home sale.
This page documents every credential Draper Heating & Air Conditioning carries. Every number, policy, and certification listed here is real, current, and verifiable. We publish this information publicly because we believe you should be able to check it before a stranger with tools enters your home.
License Number: #11487612-5501
License Type: HVAC Contractor — Utah Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing
License Holder: Draper Heating & Air Conditioning / Orlando Bader
Status: Active
Issuing Authority: Utah DOPL, 160 East 300 South, Salt Lake City, UT 84111
Utah law (Utah Code §58-55-301) requires any person or company performing HVAC installation, repair, or replacement work to hold an active DOPL contractor license. The license requires:
You can verify our license status independently at any time through the Utah DOPL public license lookup at https://secure.utah.gov/llv/search/index.html using license number #11487612-5501 or by searching under the business name “Draper Heating and Air Conditioning.”
Certification Number: #608U-2011-318472
Certification Type: Universal — Covers all refrigerant types (Type I, II, III, and HFO blends)
Certifying Organization: [Certification Body on File]
Coverage: R-22 (legacy), R-410A (current residential standard), R-454B (post-2025 A2L replacement), R-32, R-407C, and all other regulated refrigerants under 40 CFR Part 82
Section 608 of the Clean Air Act (42 U.S.C. §7671g) prohibits any person from knowingly venting, releasing, or disposing of refrigerant in a way that allows it to escape into the atmosphere, and requires technicians handling refrigerants in commercial quantities to hold EPA Section 608 certification. Universal certification (the highest tier) is required for the type of high-side and low-side service work involved in residential and commercial HVAC repair and installation.
The practical implication: an uncertified technician who vents R-454B or R-410A during a repair is violating federal law. More commonly, uncertified technicians “top off” refrigerant without finding and fixing the underlying leak — a practice that masks the symptom, wastes refrigerant, and eventually results in compressor failure when the refrigerant charge drops below the operating threshold. Our technicians recover, recycle, and recharge refrigerant to manufacturer superheat and subcooling specifications on every service visit where refrigerant is handled.
Carrier: The Hartford
Policy Type: Commercial General Liability
Coverage Limit: $2,000,000 aggregate / $1,000,000 per occurrence
Coverage Scope: Property damage and bodily injury caused by our operations at your home or business, products and completed operations, personal and advertising injury
General liability insurance protects you as the homeowner or business owner if our work damages your property or injures someone at the job site due to our negligence. Common scenarios covered include: accidental refrigerant line puncture damaging finished drywall, condenser pad placement error causing grading drainage issues, improper gas line connection discovered post-installation, or electrical wiring error on a new air handler causing component damage.
What general liability does not cover: damage caused by pre-existing conditions in your home that we could not reasonably have identified, normal wear and tear on equipment not related to our work, or damage caused by your own modifications to equipment we installed. A Certificate of Insurance is available on request before any project begins — ask during your estimate.
Carrier: Workers Compensation Fund of Utah (WCF)
Policy Status: Active
Coverage: All W-2 employees performing HVAC installation, repair, and maintenance work
Utah Code §34A-2-201 requires all employers with one or more employees to carry workers’ compensation insurance. Workers’ compensation protects you as a property owner from liability if one of our technicians is injured while working on your property — meaning you are not personally responsible for a technician’s medical bills or lost wages resulting from a workplace injury during our service.
The distinction matters: contractors who use 1099 subcontractors instead of W-2 employees frequently do not carry workers’ compensation on those subcontractors, creating potential liability for homeowners who unknowingly host uninsured workers. Every technician who enters your home from Draper Heating & Air Conditioning is a W-2 employee covered by active WCF workers’ compensation policy. We do not use day-labor or uninsured subcontractors.
North American Technician Excellence (NATE) is the HVAC industry’s leading independent certification body, recognized by manufacturers, utilities, and state licensing authorities. NATE certification requires passing proctored exams on HVAC theory, system diagnosis, code compliance, and specialty-specific technical knowledge. Unlike manufacturer training (which teaches brand-specific products) or in-house training (which varies widely by employer quality), NATE certification is standardized, third-party verified, and publicly searchable.
Our NATE-certified technicians hold certifications in the following specialties:
NATE certification numbers for each technician are available on request. Individual technician certification status can be verified through the NATE public technician search at www.natex.org.
Certified: Orlando Bader (Owner)
Certifying Body: ACCA (Air Conditioning Contractors of America) through HVAC Excellence
Scope: Residential load calculation (Manual J), equipment selection (Manual S), and duct system design (Manual D)
ACCA Manual J is the ANSI/ACCA-recognized industry standard for residential heating and cooling load calculations. Manual S governs the selection of HVAC equipment to match the calculated load. Manual D governs the design of duct systems to deliver the required airflow to each room. Together, these three standards are the foundation of a properly sized and performing HVAC system.
The majority of HVAC contractors in Utah do not perform Manual J calculations. Equipment is typically sized by the “rule of thumb” of 400–600 square feet per ton of cooling capacity — a method that ignores insulation levels, window area and orientation, infiltration rates, occupancy, internal heat gains, climate zone, and (critically for south Salt Lake County) elevation. The result is equipment that is consistently oversized for the actual load, which causes short-cycling, poor humidity control, accelerated compressor wear, and systems that fail to reach rated SEER2 efficiency in real-world operation. Every new system we quote receives a documented Manual J calculation.
Manufacturer certifications require factory training attendance, minimum annual installation volume, warranty registration compliance rates, and customer satisfaction documentation. Mitsubishi Diamond Contractor status specifically extends the standard 5-year Mitsubishi parts warranty to 12 years when the system is installed by a Diamond Contractor — a benefit that requires our certification to remain active year-over-year.
We pull building permits for every installation and replacement project that legally requires one under the applicable municipal code:
Unpermitted HVAC work creates three specific problems homeowners frequently discover too late: (1) manufacturer warranties may be voided if installation cannot be verified as code-compliant through a municipal inspection record; (2) homeowner’s insurance may deny claims for HVAC-related damage if the system was installed without permit; (3) permit records are checked during home sales, and unpermitted HVAC work must typically be disclosed, can trigger buyer-requested remediation, and can delay or derail closing.
Certificates of Insurance, DOPL license verification links, NATE certification numbers, and manufacturer authorization documentation are available on request before any project begins. Contact us at the information below.