Pre-Storm Preparation: What Professional Snow Services Do Before a Flake Falls

The best snow removal starts before the storm. Here's what happens behind the scenes as professional crews prepare.

Snow Removal Services

Reactive snow removal is always more expensive and less effective than proactive preparation. Professional snow services invest significant effort before each storm event.

Weather monitoring is continuous. Dedicated crews track forecast models, National Weather Service advisories, and private weather services to anticipate storm timing, intensity, and type of precipitation.

Winter Preparedness Tips

Equipment checks happen before every event. Plows, spreaders, blowers, and trucks are inspected and fuelled. A breakdown during a storm has serious service consequences.

Salt and liquid brine inventories are confirmed. Undersupplied crews are forced to ration product, compromising service quality. Pre-season stocking and event-by-event reorders keep supply reliable.

D&D Snow Services Coverage

Route mapping is reviewed. Crew dispatchers assign routes based on storm size, crew availability, and priority site designations. High-priority properties get earlier response windows.

Pre-treating high-priority surfaces begins when temperatures approach freezing and precipitation is imminent. Anti-icing at entrances, ramps, and high-traffic walkways is applied before freezing rain or snow arrives.

Communication with property managers is initiated before the storm. Confirming service times, alerting to forecast changes, and establishing contact points for during-storm questions is standard practice for professional contractors.