Potholes in North Glengarry, ON

Population 10,144 · Ontario

This page shows pothole reports submitted in North Glengarry, Ontario. RoadRot is a free, independent platform — anyone can report a pothole, and reports get forwarded to the responsible municipality.

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Why North Glengarry gets potholes

North Glengarry sits in Eastern Ontario's SDG Counties region, sharing the same cold winter pattern as the Ottawa area, which runs noticeably colder than southwestern Ontario cities. That means repeated freeze-thaw cycles through late winter and early spring, where water seeps into pavement cracks, freezes, expands, and breaks the surface apart. The township's own winter maintenance notes acknowledge ice formation during thaw-freeze events, and a significant portion of the road network is unpaved gravel, which develops its own pothole and washboarding problems independent of asphalt failures.

How to report potholes in North Glengarry

North Glengarry doesn't appear to have a dedicated pothole app, online form, or 311 service. Your best bet for reporting directly to the township is the Public Works Department via the main office at 613-525-1110 or info@northglengarry.ca. Keep in mind that road authority matters here: township roads go to North Glengarry Public Works, county roads like County Road 22 or County Road 34 are the responsibility of the United Counties of SDG, and any provincial highways fall under the Ontario Ministry of Transportation. RoadRot adds a public layer on top of all that: you can drop a pin, rate severity, attach a photo, and use the built-in email tool to send a complaint directly to your municipal or provincial representative. Your report stays visible on the map, so other drivers can confirm it and add weight to the case.
Guides

Hit a pothole in North Glengarry and damaged your vehicle? Read the Ontario pothole damage claim guide — deadlines, where to file, and what evidence you need. New to RoadRot? See how to report a pothole.

Common questions

Who is responsible for fixing potholes in North Glengarry?

It depends on the road. Township roads are handled by North Glengarry's Public Works Department. County roads, such as County Road 22 and County Road 34, are the responsibility of the United Counties of Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry (SDG). Provincial highways fall under the Ontario Ministry of Transportation, though no 400-series highways run directly through the township.

Does North Glengarry have a 311 service or pothole reporting app?

No dedicated 311 line or pothole app appears to exist for North Glengarry. To report a road issue, your best options are calling the township at 613-525-1110 or emailing info@northglengarry.ca. Make sure you're contacting the right authority for the type of road you're reporting.

When is pothole season worst in North Glengarry?

Late winter and early spring are the roughest stretch. That's when temperatures swing above and below freezing repeatedly, forcing water in and out of cracks in the pavement. Gravel roads can also develop serious washboarding and potholes through the summer maintenance season, so road quality issues here aren't limited to spring.

How do I claim damage to my vehicle from a pothole in Ontario?

You can file a claim against the municipality responsible for the road, but Ontario law requires you to give written notice within 10 days of the incident. Document everything immediately: photos of the pothole, your damage, the location, and the date. A lawyer or small claims court can help if the municipality disputes liability, and the threshold for municipal negligence claims in Ontario is fairly high, so solid documentation matters.

How does RoadRot help if it doesn't contact the township for me?

RoadRot makes bad roads visible and documented. When you pin a pothole, other drivers can confirm the report, which builds a public record of the problem. From any report, you can use the built-in email tool to send a complaint directly to your local representative yourself. Public pressure and paper trails tend to move things faster than a single call that goes unlogged.