AllStarSnowRemoval delivers county-wide storm control with plows, de-icing crews, and constant communication so every Chautauqua County NY approach stays open and safe.
County-Ready Reliability
We stage salt, brine, and loaders near chokepoints so your high-traffic lanes stay moving while storms build.
Photo and timestamp after each service
ADA-first treatment for ramps and steps
Surface-safe blades for pavers and concrete
Lot & Roadway Plowing
Edge-to-edge clearing with stack zones placed to preserve sightlines and drainage.
Sidewalk & Entry
Precision shoveling and melt for every doorway and transition area.
De-Icing Programs
Material plans that match your surfaces: asphalt, pavers, decorative concrete, loading pads.
Storm Monitoring
Live radar plus on-the-ground scouts trigger crews before slick spots form.
FAQs
What is your response time when snow stacks up quickly?
We stage equipment inside the county and dispatch before accumulation hits agreed thresholds, keeping first passes within tight windows.
How do you avoid damage to pavers and edges?
Surface protection is baked into our SOPs: pressure controls, rubber edges, and stack placement that respects sightlines and drainage.
Maintenance & Materials
We design melt plans around your surfacescalcium for cold snaps, brine for efficiency, salt where appropriate.
Seasonal contracts, per-push, and per-event options give you budget control while guaranteeing readiness.
Pre-treat before overnight freezes
Follow-up sweeps during long storms
Shavings and reopens to full width
Who We Are
AllStarSnowRemoval trains local crews to move fast without harming surfaces, pairing national standards with county-specific know-how.
Our mission is continuity: clear drive lanes, safe walkways, and documented proof that liability is under control.
County Checklist
Pre-storm site audit with maps and stack zones
Crew lead assigned per property
Backup equipment on standby
Post-service photos and timestamps
Service Depth
From single-site clinics to multi-location retail, we scale plows, hand crews, and melt to match your footprint.
We treat entrances, crosswalks, loading areas, and ADA routes as top-tier priorities, returning as conditions change.
Why Choose Us
Prevention beats reaction: our scouts report live conditions so we deploy before ice becomes liability.
Safety-First
Risk reduction baked into the plan: early melt, fast follow-ups, meticulous cleanup.
Predictable ETAs
Routing software and live dispatch keep ETAs stable, even when storms intensify.
Surface Protection
Controlled blade pressure and rubber edges protect curbs and decorative finishes.
Redundancy
No skipped stopsredundant crews cover call-outs and maintenance.
Process That Works
We align on snow triggers, service windows, and stack locations, then codify it all so every crew executes identically.
Our playbook evolves every eventnotes roll into the next dispatch so quality only improves.
Industries We Serve
Retail plazas and grocery
Healthcare campuses and clinics
Distribution yards and depots
Hospitality, restaurants, mixed-use
Townhome and condo associations
They never miss a pass. Our entrances are spotless before staff arrives.
Property Manager
Slip claims disappeared after their de-icing plan.
Risk Coordinator
They stage gear early, and we open on time.
Ops Manager
Ready Before The Next Flurry
Get ahead of winter: approve routes, stack zones, and service triggers today so storms are routine, not disruptive.
Choose the crew that treats your liability like their own and proves it with every update.
Book Your Coverage
Talk to dispatch now; we will have a plan and materials staged before the next system arrives.
Call us: 855-921-3695
Chautauqua County is the westernmost county in the U.S. state of New York. As of the 2020 census, the population was 127,657. Its county seat is Mayville, and its largest city is Jamestown. Its name is believed to be the lone surviving remnant of the Erie language, a tongue lost in the 17th century Beaver Wars; its meaning is unknown and a subject of speculation. The county was created in 1808 and organized in 1811.