Deicer in Prince George, BC.
Prince George is the snowiest city in BC by a wide margin — 2 m winters are normal and storms can last 72 hours. Northern BC interior averages 220+ cm of dry powder snow with frequent –35 °C cold; snow hauling needed by mid-January most years. Winters here are among the harshest in Canada — sub-zero temperatures hold for weeks and storm totals routinely top a metre over a season — and lots are large and drive-times between properties dominate routing. The local economy leans on UNBC, Canfor, BCR Industrial, and Northern Health, which means our routes pre-treat UNBC's sites before residential bookings whenever a storm is forecast inside their shift change.
Cold-snap reality: operating in Prince George
- Annual snowfall: 220 cm typical (heavy-belt band)
- De-icer cutoff: rock salt above −12 °C, calcium chloride below
- Response SLA: ≤ 4 hours from trigger
- Plowing trigger: 2 cm accumulation
- Winter temperature: -10 °C average (cold baseline)
- Inland factor: deep-cold reserve unit hot at the College Heights depot, winterised diesel blend below −20 °C
Why deicer in Prince George?
Deicer stocked at the Prince George depot. Lot-traceable, AMS-2014 compliant where applicable. Order by 14:00 for same-day pickup; freight to surrounding counties moves on our route trucks.
Where we cover in Prince George
- Neighbourhoods: Downtown, College Heights, Hart, and Pinewood
- Postal coverage: every postal-code unit inside the city limits
- Outlying districts: same-day for accounts within 30 km of the Prince George depot
How we route Prince George
- Dispatch density: satellite-city routing
- Priority routes: Canfor, BCR Industrial, Northern Health on a separate route book — College Heights and Hart contracts never wait behind residential queues
- Unit replacement target: < 45 minutes during storm events (tier-C priority)
- Local depot crew: lives in Prince George, knows the streets, named in your dispatch record — not a national call centre

