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🌾 How Wichita Preps for Winter Weather
What you should know

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Good morning, Wichita!
Wichita averages 11-13 inches of snow per season. Are you taking the over or under?
Let's get to it!
- Landon Huslig

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How Wichita Preps for Winter Weather

I have had a few new-to-town people ask what to expect with winter weather / snow / ice. More specifically how the city handles winter weather prepwith plowing, etc.
Additionally, every winter, local Wichitans collectively asks the same questions:
“Are the roads bad?”
“Why is my street still covered?”
“How did that snowplow get that name?”
Since it might be 50 today and snowing tomorrow, I thought it might be a good idea to look into this.
What most people don’t see is that winter prep in Wichita starts long before the first forecasted flake. Behind the scenes, the City runs a surprisingly methodical operation that balances safety, scale, and the reality that Kansas weather does whatever it wants.
Here’s how it actually works.
The Snowplows with Personality

If you’ve ever seen a snowplow named something like Plowy McPlowface or Sleetwood Mac, you already know Wichita leaned into the fun.
Each winter, the City invites residents to help name snowplows, turning a utilitarian fleet into a rolling set of inside jokes. It’s lighthearted, but it also serves a purpose: it gets people paying attention to snow operations.
The City also offers an interactive snowplow map, letting residents see:
Where plows are actively operating
Which routes are being treated first
How storms are being managed in real time
It’s oddly comforting to watch your favorite named plow slowly crawl across town while you decide whether today is a “work from home” day.
A few other names: Aaron Brrr, Blizzard of Oz, Snowbi One Kenobi and so many more.
The Priority System (Why Some Roads Get Love First)
When winter weather hits, Wichita doesn’t just send plows out randomly. There’s a very clear hierarchy.
The first priority is 1,500 lane miles of emergency routes and major arterials, including:
Roads serving hospitals and emergency facilities
Major traffic corridors
Routes serving public schools
These roads are essential for ambulances, fire trucks, buses, and people who don’t get a snow day.
Once those are addressed, crews shift to:
Secondary arterials
Residential streets that provide access to schools
You can find a full list of routes from 2024-2025 here.

This is usually where frustration kicks in, because…
Why Your Neighborhood Street Isn’t Plowed

This surprises a lot of people every year:
The City of Wichita does not treat or plow neighborhood streets.
That’s not a budget oversight or a weather fail. It’s a policy decision shared by many cities in similar climates.
Likewise, the City does not maintain:
K-96, I-135, I-235, Kellogg
Those are handled by Kansas Department of Transportation or KDOT, not the City.
So when you’re sliding down a side street wondering where the plow is, the answer is usually: it’s on an emergency route, doing exactly what it’s supposed to do.
The Winter Fleet (Bigger Than You Think)

Wichita’s snow operation is more than just a few trucks with blades.
The City’s winter fleet includes:
8 brine trucks used for pre-treatment
Over 70 trucks equipped with plows and salt/sand spreaders
Three dispatch locations across the city
Before storms hit, crews often pre-treat roads with brine, which helps prevent ice from bonding to the pavement. That’s why sometimes roads look wet even when snow hasn’t started yet.
The Salt Situation (Yes, They’ve Thought This Through)

If you’ve ever wondered whether Wichita might “run out” of salt, the short answer is: not likely.
On hand and in reserve:
~6,000 tons of 50/50 salt-sand mix ready to go
~10,000 tons of straight salt in reserve
Capacity to make an additional 20,000 tons of salt-sand mix if needed
After each winter weather event, the City replenishes its stock to be ready for the next round of Kansas unpredictability.
What Happens After Winter Finally Lets Go
Once spring arrives (usually sometime around March or April, when we’re pretty sure Kansas is done with winter), crews begin cleanup.
Salt and sand material is:
Collected from streets
Reused at the landfill as a suppressant to keep materials from blowing away
It’s one of those small examples of efficiency you never see, but definitely benefit from.
The Big Picture
Winter weather in Wichita isn’t about perfection. It’s about prioritization, preparation, and managing a massive citywide operation with limited time and unpredictable conditions.
So the next time it snows:
Check the plow map
Appreciate the plow names
Remember there’s a system behind the chaos
And maybe give a little grace to the crews working overnight while the rest of us are watching the forecast refresh for the 14th time.
Did you learn something today about how the City preps? |
What do you want to see us go deep on in a future deep dive?

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- Landon

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