Winter Route Planning Across Quebec and Ontario
From storm-belt avoidance to staged heated-trailer staging, here is the operational playbook our dispatch team runs every November through March.

Quebec and Ontario winters punish unprepared carriers. The lanes don't change much — Montreal to Toronto is still Montreal to Toronto — but the failure modes change completely. A summer route is a logistics problem. A January route is a survival problem layered on top of a logistics problem.
Here's the operational playbook our dispatch team runs from November through March, distilled across twenty winter seasons.
Pre-season fleet prep starts October 1st
Every unit in the winter rotation gets a full systems check before the first snow: block heater function, fuel-line additives, tire chains in the cab, emergency kit refresh, reefer (and heated unit) low-ambient performance test. The day-of inspection on an actual storm day is too late.
Storm-belt avoidance, not storm-belt heroics
The instinct of an inexperienced dispatcher is to push a driver through bad weather to "make the appointment." Twenty winters in, we do the opposite: we re-route around the belt as soon as Environment Canada upgrades a watch to a warning, and we tell the customer first. A re-routed shipment that arrives 4 hours late beats a stranded shipment that arrives 36 hours late and triggers a claim.
Staged heated trailers at known choke points
The freeze-sensitive freight we move can't sit in an unheated trailer for 8 hours if our primary unit goes down. We keep a small fleet of heated trailers staged at known choke points along the 401 corridor. If a unit fails, the swap is measured in hours instead of in lost product.
Driver discretion is non-negotiable
Our drivers have absolute authority to park a unit when conditions cross their personal safety threshold. No dispatch override, no customer-pressure exception. This costs us a small percentage of appointment hits every winter. It costs us zero rollovers, zero ditched units, and zero injuries — which is the only operating margin that actually matters.
Customer comms intensify when the weather does
The single biggest source of customer frustration in winter isn't the delay — it's hearing about the delay from somewhere other than us. When a storm warning is issued for a lane we have product on, we contact every affected customer proactively, before they call us. That call is the difference between a winter inconvenience and a winter complaint.



