County-wide coverage 24/7 dispatch

Snow Removal Sheridan County ND

on-time passes, surface-safe methods, and concise reports you can share with boards and tenants} so your lots, lanes, and walkways stay open every storm.

County readiness

We stage equipment near priority roads and commercial clusters to shorten response times, match municipal plow cycles, and prevent refreeze that creates slip risk.

Who We Are

County-focused logistics

Our county command center in Sheridan County ND watches radar, reroutes trucks, and confirms ETAs so you experience consistent service even in prolonged events.

Surface protection

Calibrated edges and metered spreaders preserve asphalt, concrete, and pavers while keeping traction for vehicles and pedestrians.

Accountable communication

Time-stamped arrivals, photo proof, and service summaries give you evidence for compliance, insurance, and resident updates.

County Snow Removal Services

Roads, lanes, and entries

Thorough clearing for shared drives, cul-de-sacs, and feeder roads with hazard flagging and edge awareness.

Parking lots + campuses

Scaled fleets for shopping centers, offices, and healthcare timed to your operating hours.

Pretreatment + de-icing

Pretreat cycles that blunt accumulation and refreeze to reduce slip liability.

Event plans

Per-push plans tuned to county weather patterns, trigger depths, and budget guardrails.

Why Choose RapidSnowRemoval

Consistency

SLA-backed response windows, documented passes, and QC spot checks on every storm.

Safety

Pedestrian-first protocols, cones, and traction checks at entrances, docks, and ramps.

Clarity

Live updates via text and email, plus photo galleries for each event.

Local

Crew leads who know Sheridan County ND ordinances for smoother coordination.

Operations and Detail

Before storms, we survey your sites, set markers, and calibrate spreaders. During snowfall, we sequence primary lanes, ADA paths, loading docks, and emergency access. After municipal plows pass, we loop back for cleanup and refreeze mitigation.

Every route includes time-stamps, driver names, and equipment lists. Route captains perform spot checks and upload images for your records.

We coordinate with property managers, facility leads, and safety teams to reduce disruption and keep pedestrian flow intuitive.

Safety + Risk Reduction

Slip reduction

Targeted de-icing on inclines, crosswalks, and docks to cut incidents.

Surface care

Rubber edges on blades, adjusted down-pressure, and metered salt save your pavement and landscaping.

Visibility

Markers and reflective gear keep crews seen while guiding vehicles and pedestrians.

Documentation

Image proof, storm logs, and completion summaries support compliance and insurance.

Testimonials

Reliable passes and clear updates kept our retail lots open. The image reports made board approvals easy.

- Retail Ops, Sheridan County ND

They pretreated before dawn and returned after the county plow. No incidents all season.

- Logistics Manager, Sheridan County ND

Our HOA saw better clearance and less refreeze. Crews were professional and thorough.

- HOA President, Sheridan County ND

County-Level Advantages

County weather shifts fast, so we monitor radar and pavement temps to adapt routes. If snowfall spikes, we add passes and deploy loaders to keep sightlines clear at exits and intersections.

We build salt maps that prioritize shaded zones, curbs, loading bays, and bus stops. That cuts waste and limits chlorides where vegetation or decorative concrete matters.

For blended campuses, we sequence plows to honor delivery windows, clinic hours, and school drop-offs so visitors see safe, dry approaches.

Ready for your next county storm?

Call dispatch

Call now at 855-921-3695. Share your map, trigger depth, and hours. We will assign a route captain and document your priorities.

What you get

  • Primary plow at agreed depth
  • Follow-up after municipal sweeps
  • Selective de-icing to stop refreeze
  • Image recap with timestamps

FAQs for County Properties

When do you dispatch?

We launch crews at your agreed trigger depth, often 2" depending on your tolerance. If lake-effect bands spike, we pull crews forward to keep primaries clear.

Do you pretreat?

We brine high-traffic and shade zones pre-storm to limit bonding. After municipal plows push, we reapply to prevent refreeze at curbs and dock slopes.

Do you adapt to schedules?

Yes. We align routes to your delivery, clinic, and class windows. When lots are full, we stage and come back to finish without disrupting operations.

Will curbs get scraped?

Rubber edges, balanced down-pressure, and spotting keep curbs, drains, and pavers safe. We flag hazards in the preseason to avoid impacts.

What proof do I get?

Every pass includes logged arrivals, before/after photos, materials applied, crew names, and annotations on any blocked areas. You get a recap for boards, insurers, and tenants.

Extended County Content

County grids blend rural lanes and busy retail, and we draft salt maps to match those patterns. Our teams hit overpasses, campus crossings, and station bays first, then circle through residential loops and feeder roads.

If snowfall lingers, we rotate crews to prevent fatigue and keep passes tight. Captains ride-along for QA, adjusting blade height on crowned roads and staging loaders for pile relocation where sightlines shrink.

We respect environmental goals. Metered salt and targeted brine protect vegetation and hardscapes while maintaining friction where liability peaks. Spreader calibration happen before every shift.

Communication stays live. Stakeholders see ETAs, geo-tagged photos, and service notes so questions get answers in real time. If you need re-prioritization, we reshuffle instantly.

Choose per-push for variable winters, seasonal for predictable spend, or hybrid to blend risk and cost. Either way, you get a assigned county captain who knows your pain points, school calendars, and your standards.

Our mission: open lanes, safe walks, predictable updates, and evidence after every event so you can focus on operations, not weather.

The Dakota Territory legislature created the county on January 4, 1873, naming it for Civil War General Philip Henry Sheridan. The county organization was not completed at that time, but the new county was not attached to another county for administrative or judicial purposes. In 1883 and again in 1887, the county boundaries were reduced, and on November 8, 1892, the county was dissolved, its remaining territory assigned to McLean. This lasted until the November 3, 1908 election, when McLean County voters chose to partition off the eastern portion of that unit into a new county, although the new boundaries were somewhat different from the former Sheridan. The new county government was effected on December 24 of that year.
City
Zip Codes
Fargo
58102 58104 58103 58105 58106 58107 58108 58109 58121 58122 58124 58125 58126
Bismarck
58505 58504 58501 58503 58507
Grand Forks
58202 58203 58201 58206 58208
Minot
58707 58703 58701 58702
West Fargo
58078
Williston
58801 58802 58803
Dickinson
58601 58602
Mandan
58554
Jamestown
58401 58402 58405
Wahpeton
58075 58076
Valley City
58072
Watford City
58854
Minot AFB
58705 58704
Grafton
58237
Lincoln
58504
Horace
58047
Beulah
58523
New Town
58763
Grand Forks AFB
58204 58205
Hazen
58545
Rugby
58368
Casselton
58012
Bottineau
58318
Carrington
58421
Lisbon
58054
Stanley
58784
Oakes
58474
Mayville
58257
Langdon
58249
Belcourt
58316
Harvey
58341
Hillsboro
58045
Bowman
58623
Garrison
58540
Park River
58270
Washburn
58577
Burlington
58722
Surrey
58785
Larimore
58251
New Rockford
58356
Cavalier
58220
Tioga
58852
Parshall
58770
Cando
58324
Shell Valley
58316
Thompson
58278
Rolla
58367
Mapleton
58059
Fort Totten
58335
Velva
58790
Hettinger
58639
Crosby
58730
Ellendale
58436
Enderlin
58027
Beach
58621