Toronto Star

Battling the elements

With salters and plows at the ready, city is prepared for the war on winter

- DAVID RIDER CITY HALL BUREAU CHIEF

The city of Toronto has launched its annual war on winter with “snow fighters” ready around the clock to keep roads and sidewalks salted and plowed.

After a military-style parade of plows and trucks for the news cameras Thursday, Mayor John Tory noted the first forecast of significan­t snow for Toronto since last spring.

“City crews are ready,” for a months- long campaign that will cost Toronto more than $90 million, he declared.

“Through planning, technology and access to a robust fleet of snow-clearing vehicles, we are confident that residents and visitors will be able to get around safely and effectivel­y all winter long.”

Myles Curry, the city’s transporta­tion director, struck a similar note of bravado. “Between our contracted staff and our city staff, we have approximat­ely 1,500 able snow fighters that are available 24 hours a day,” he told reporters at a city facility on Eastern Ave., where a mountain of road salt awaits the white stuff.

“We have staff right now preparing for the winter event we expect later today.”

Environmen­t Canada was predicting several centimetre­s of snow, starting in late afternoon and continuing overnight, to hit local streets.

The city’s fighting force includes 600 road plows, 300 sidewalk plows and 200 salters either owned or contracted, with additional vehicles available for

use if needed. When big storms are looming, some city staff sleep near the plows, ready to jump into action, Tory noted.

Most snowstorms batter the city for14 to16 hours. Salters are the first to be dispatched, to main roads and expressway­s and then local roads. Plows follow on roads and non-residentia­l public sidewalks if more than a few centimetre­s fall.

Curry said this year city staff are prioritizi­ng bike paths in the downtown core and on the Martin Goodman trail. They are also using more weathersen­sing technology than ever before, including patrol trucks and “weather informatio­n stations” gauging air and road temperatur­e and more.

Citizens have a role in moving vehicles off roads about to be plowed, if possible, and reporting unplowed snow to the city’s 311 service. Curry asked people to wait at least 16 hours until after the snow before calling to give city crews a chance to finish their cleanup.

Still, winter has won battles before, if not the war. Most famously, in 1999, then-mayor Mel Lastman called in the army to fight drifts and get people moving, to the delight of the rest of Canada.

Last April, the city was caught off-guard by a mid-April snowstorm that blanketed Toronto.

Increased freeze-and-thaw cycles in recent years weaken pavement and cause holes to form. City crews this year have filled more than 230,330 potholes.

That’s an increase over the previous two years but less than in 2015 and 2014.

Potholes cost taxpayers because people with damaged cars can seek compensati­on. The Fixer reported the city faced about 900 such claims just in January of this year, more than the total in all of 2017.

Toronto’s city manager has asked all city department­s including transporta­tion services to try to find ways to freeze spending in 2019 budget submission­s.

 ?? RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR ?? Mayor John Tory announces the city’s winter preparedne­ss plans at the Eastern Ave. works yard on Thursday.
RICHARD LAUTENS TORONTO STAR Mayor John Tory announces the city’s winter preparedne­ss plans at the Eastern Ave. works yard on Thursday.

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