Montreal to spend nearly $200M on snow removal as winter costs rise across Canada
MONTREAL — There’s a saying in municipal politics: win snow removal, win the day. But as inflation takes a toll on tight city budgets, the price of winning that battle is rising.
Take Montreal, where a combination of high snowfall and dense streets result in the city running one of the biggest snow-clearing operations in the world.
Every year, an army of workers head out to salt, plow and haul away snow from the city’s roughly 10,000 kilometres of streets, as well as sidewalks and some bike paths. The upcoming winter season is estimated to cost the city $200 million, according to executive committee member Maja Vodanovic.
Earlier in November Mayor Valérie Plante cited the rising cost of snow removal — of up to 100 per cent year over year in some boroughs — as one of the reasons she had to increase property taxes by an average of 4.9 per cent in 2024. “That’s enormous,” she said, “but we’re not going to stop removing snow.”