Trent Frazer, BCE #B3413
Board Certified Entomologist · Bluffdale, Utah
Falcon Liability Shield — Healthcare

Four regulatory regimes govern pest management in your hospital. Fourteen documents prove you're meeting them. Your pest control vendor produces one of them: an invoice.

Falcon produces all fourteen. Authored, signed, and sealed by a Board Certified Entomologist, delivered to your compliance file every month — at no additional charge over standard monthly pest service.

DHHS licensing · UDAF pesticide law · The Joint Commission · CMS Conditions of Participation — plus your local health department if you operate a kitchen, and Utah's school IPM rule if there's a school on your campus.
Trent Frazer, BCE #B3413. There are roughly four Board Certified Entomologists in Utah. One is in private practice.

What this costs

Documentation of this kind — a written IPM plan, a property-specific exposure assessment, BCE-signed protocols, an annual program evaluation — runs $3,500 to $8,500 when built as a standalone consulting engagement by a Board Certified Entomologist. Defense counsel bills $400–$600 an hour to audit it afterward.

Falcon includes all of it with monthly pest service. There is no separate documentation charge, no onboarding fee, and no upcharge over what a standard licensed pest control company quotes for the same route.

You are not choosing between a cheaper vendor and a more expensive one. You are choosing between an invoice and a compliance file, at the same price.

What we can and cannot do

Every obligation on this page belongs to your facility. Utah Admin. Code R432-100-39 places the pest-control program duty on the licensee — the hospital. The Joint Commission surveys the hospital. CMS certifies the hospital. No contractor can assume, discharge, or guarantee any of it, and any vendor who tells you otherwise is selling you something that will not survive a surveyor's first question.

What a contractor can do is produce the documentary content for the artifacts you are required to hold, in the format your files and your surveyors expect, signed by someone whose professional certification is on the line.

That is what Falcon does. You hold the file. We build it, sign it, and keep it current.

The fourteen documents

Every citation on this page links to the primary source. Check them.

The fourteen compliance documents, comparing what a standard licensed pest control company produces against what Falcon produces. Activate a row to read the governing regulatory text.
Document What requires it Does a standard licensed pest control company produce it? Does Falcon?

The single checkmark is real. Utah law compels it and they comply. Everything else on this page, they are not required to give you — and don't.

Also included, and not counted above because no rule compels it: a property-specific liability exposure assessment written for your campus by a Board Certified Entomologist. That is the document your insurance carrier and your defense counsel would ask for first.

How you receive it

Within 30 days of contract

The Onboarding Package

  • Property-specific liability exposure assessment
  • Written campus IPM plan
  • BCE-signed pest protocols by species
  • Device inventory and placement map
  • Staff training curriculum
  • Licensing, insurance, and credentials file
  • The signed, dated services agreement
Every month, quarter, and year

The Recurring Stream

  • Per-visit service record with full R68-7-11(11) data elements
  • Monthly pest activity summary
  • Quarterly BCE-signed report with trend analysis
  • Annual program evaluation in EC.04.01.01 format
  • Annual IPM plan review
  • Annual training reconciliation

Delivered three ways: A bound binder with the Falcon Standard seal on the cover, tabbed and ready to hand a surveyor · One-click download from your Falcon Community Command portal · Printed on request, any time, no charge.

Why the signature matters

No Utah rule, no CMS Condition of Participation, and no Joint Commission standard requires your pest control provider to be a Board Certified Entomologist. Falcon will never tell you otherwise.

CDC and HICPAC put it this way, in the Guidelines for Environmental Infection Control in Health-Care Facilities — verbatim, Category II recommendation:

"Contract for routine pest control service by a credentialed pest-control specialist who will tailor the application to the needs of a health-care facility."

A Board Certified Entomologist is the strongest available reading of "credentialed pest-control specialist." That is the argument. It is not that the law requires it.

Here is what the credential actually does. A BCE is bound to a professional standard and a published code of ethics, must qualify by degree and experience, must pass certification examinations, and must recertify. That means the person who authors your IPM plan, signs your annual program evaluation, and writes your vector risk assessment is accountable to a certifying body for the accuracy of what he puts his name on — and CDC and HICPAC recommend contracting pest control for a health care facility through a credentialed specialist who tailors the program to the facility.

A licensed applicator is licensed to apply pesticides. That is a real credential and it is the right one for spraying a building. It is not a credential for authoring the documents your accreditation file depends on.

The entomologist who designs your program is the entomologist who delivers it. There is no handoff between the person who wrote the protections and the person performing the service.

Board Certified Entomologist seal
Trent Frazer, BCE #B3413 · Board Certified Entomologist (General Entomology) · MS Entomology, University of Florida · Utah Commercial Applicator #4001-16378 · UDAF Business #4000-000021793 · State of Utah Cooperative Contract MA5191

Start with the audit

A 30-minute Liability Exposure Audit at one of your facilities. A Board Certified Entomologist walks your building and gives you a signed written assessment of what your current pest documentation file contains and what it is missing.

No obligation. No upsell. No charge. If you keep your current vendor, keep the report and hold them to it.