Potholes in Pincourt, QC
Population 14,751 · Quebec
This page shows pothole reports submitted in Pincourt, Quebec. RoadRot is a free, independent platform — anyone can report a pothole, and reports get forwarded to the responsible municipality.
Common questions
Who is responsible for fixing potholes in Pincourt?
Municipal streets, including Boulevard Cardinal-Léger, fall under the Town of Pincourt's Public Works and Urban Infrastructure Department. Provincial highways like Highway 20, which runs through Île Perrot, are the responsibility of the Ministère des Transports et de la Mobilité durable du Québec (MTQ), so who you contact depends on which road the pothole is on.
How do I report a pothole in Pincourt?
During business hours, call the Public Works Department at 514 453-8981 (option 5) or email garage@villepincourt.qc.ca with the closest address or intersection. Outside of office hours, on evenings, weekends, or holidays, dial 3-1-1. The town typically dispatches repair crews within the same week a pothole is reported.
Does Pincourt have a pothole reporting app or online form?
No dedicated app or standalone online form was found on the Town of Pincourt's website as of our research. The main official channels are phone and email through Public Works. You can use RoadRot to log and publicly track the pothole while you sort out the official report.
What's the worst time of year for potholes in Pincourt?
Late winter into early spring is the roughest stretch. Heavy truck traffic from Highway 20 compounds wear on local connector roads all year, but it's the spring thaw, when frozen ground starts shifting and pavement has absorbed a full winter of salt, water, and freeze-thaw cycles, that brings the worst damage to the surface.
Can I claim compensation for vehicle damage caused by a pothole in Quebec?
You can file a claim against the responsible road authority, either the municipality for local streets or the MTQ for provincial highways, but you'll generally need to show the authority knew about the pothole and failed to act within a reasonable time. Document everything: photos, the date, the exact location, and any repair estimates. Quebec's Commission des droits de la personne et des droits de la jeunesse website and local legal aid resources can point you toward the formal process.