Potholes in Saint-Colomban, QC

Population 17,740 · Quebec

This page shows pothole reports submitted in Saint-Colomban, Quebec. RoadRot is a free, independent platform — anyone can report a pothole, and reports get forwarded to the responsible municipality.

Nobody's reported a pothole in Saint-Colomban yet.

Be the first. RoadRot tracks the report, sends it to the city, and stays on it until it's fixed.

Report a pothole in Saint-Colomban

Why Saint-Colomban gets potholes

Saint-Colomban sits in the Laurentians north of Montreal, squarely in one of Quebec's most punishing freeze-thaw zones. Winter temperatures swing repeatedly above and below freezing, letting water seep into pavement cracks, freeze, expand, and blow the asphalt apart. Research published in the Journal of Applied Meteorology and Climatology projects that daily freeze-thaw events will become more frequent in coming winters, which is bad news for roads that are already fighting a losing battle against the season.

How to report potholes in Saint-Colomban

Saint-Colomban is a small independent municipality and falls outside Montreal's 311 system, so there's no city-wide app or unified hotline here. For potholes on local municipal streets, your best bet is contacting the Service des travaux publics (Public Works) directly through the municipal office at (450) 436-1453, though you should confirm current contact details at saint-colomban.qc.ca before calling. If the pothole is on a provincial route like Route 158 or near Autoroute 15, that falls under the Ministère des Transports et de la Mobilité durable (MTMD), and you can check or report conditions through Quebec 511. RoadRot works alongside those channels: you drop a pin, the community confirms it, and if you want to push harder, the built-in email tool lets you send a complaint directly to your municipal or provincial representative yourself.
Guides

Hit a pothole in Saint-Colomban and damaged your vehicle? Read the Quebec 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 Saint-Colomban?

It depends on the road. Local municipal streets fall under Saint-Colomban's own Service des travaux publics. Provincial routes passing through the area, including anything on the Route 158 corridor or near Autoroute 15, are the responsibility of the Ministère des Transports et de la Mobilité durable (MTMD). If you're not sure which category your road falls under, the municipal office is a reasonable first call.

Does Saint-Colomban have a 311 service?

No. Saint-Colomban is an independent municipality and is not part of Montreal's 311 system. To report a pothole or road issue, contact the municipal office directly at (450) 436-1453, or check the official site at saint-colomban.qc.ca for current public works contact information.

What's the worst time of year for potholes in Saint-Colomban?

Late winter into early spring, typically February through April, is when potholes are at their worst. That's when freeze-thaw cycles are most active, moisture is heavy in the pavement, and the damage from months of cold finally shows itself all at once. Roads that looked rough in January can become genuinely hazardous by March.

How do I claim compensation for vehicle damage caused by a pothole in Quebec?

In Quebec, you can file a claim against the municipality or the MTMD (for provincial roads) if you can show the road authority knew or should have known about the hazard and failed to act. You'll want to document the pothole with photos, note the exact location and date, and keep your repair receipts. CAA-Québec has published guidance on this process, and consulting a legal aid clinic or lawyer is worth it for larger claims.

How does RoadRot help with potholes in Saint-Colomban?

RoadRot is a public, crowdsourced map where anyone can pin a pothole, rate how bad it is, and add a photo. Other drivers can confirm the same report, which builds a visible record of the problem. If you want to push further, there's a built-in tool that lets you compose and send an email complaint to your municipal or provincial representative directly. RoadRot doesn't contact the city on your behalf, but a public map with multiple confirmations and a direct email to a councillor tends to get attention.