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Operation snowfall: A look at how Montreal is cleaning up after back-to-back storms
MONTREAL — In Montreal’s southwest, by the Lachine Canal, trucks come and go like clockwork, dumping loads of snow as blowers the size of tanks send it cascading in the air onto a 10-storey-high bank. Known as the Angrignon snow depot, it is one of 10 sites across Montreal storing the record-breaking snowfall that hit the city in recent days.
Each winter, Montreal deploys an army of people to clear the roads and sidewalks, many of whom are working overtime after the city received more than one-third of its annual snowfall over four days earlier this month. On Friday, city officials estimated that the cavalry will be at work for at least another 10 days to clear the more than 70 centimetres that fell between Feb. 13-16.
“We’ve removed 32 per cent of the snow … There’s still a lot of work to do,” Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante told reporters at the Angrignon depot, after dismounting a snowblower. Each of the 10 storage sites can collect approximately 800 Olympic swimming pools’ worth of snow, Plante said.
Brian Levasseur Gallagher, spokesperson for Beluga Construction, which manages the Angrignon site with the city, said trucks are making 3,000 trips to the depot each day to dump snow.