King County Reduces Mercury Pollution by Working with Region´s Vehicle Fleets
SEATTLE, WA — A pilot program managed by King County Solid Waste Division and the Local Hazardous Waste Management Program is helping public and private vehicle fleet managers and technicians safely remove and recover mercury-containing “tilt switches” in many vehicles, the county announced on December 6.
SEATTLE, WA — A pilot program managed by King County Solid Waste Division and the Local Hazardous Waste Management Program is helping public and private vehicle fleet managers and technicians safely remove and recover mercury-containing “tilt switches” in many vehicles, the county announced on December 6. Twelve fleets are participating in the pilot project:
AAA of Washington
City of Auburn
City of Bellevue
King County Fleet Division
City of Seattle - Charles St. Garage
City of Renton
U.S. General Services Administration, EPA Region 10
King County Metro Transit
King County Solid Waste Division
Port of Seattle
City of Tukwila
University of Washington A little-known but significant source of mercury pollution, tilt switches turn on trunk and under-hood convenience lights when the trunk lid or hood is raised. Each switch contains more than a gram of mercury. The Local Hazardous Waste Management Program estimates that between 35 to 108 pounds of mercury from switches are released from end-of-life vehicles each year in King County. “We´ve had terrific cooperation from fleet managers and technicians; they are doing a great job of voluntarily reducing mercury pollution,” said King County Executive Ron Sims. Mercury from tilt switches is released into the environment when vehicles are shredded and smelted for recycling. Mercury is highly toxic, and human exposure to mercury can occur from eating mercury-contaminated fish. Removing or replacing the switches with ball-bearing switches is a key step in reducing the amount of mercury released into the environment. Solid Waste Division program manager Alexandra Thompson would like to see other counties introduce similar programs. “This program is a significant part of the effort to reduce mercury pollution from vehicles in King County. This is a source of pollution that very few people even know about, so it shows once again how public agencies do a great job of educating and protecting the public,” she said. Thompson said the program will collect more than 500 switches by the end of the year. The program provides collection buckets, replacement switches, how-to documents on proper removal and replacement of mercury switches, and lists of vehicles likely to have the mercury switches to fleet maintenance supervisors. Solid Waste Division staff collect the switches from participating shops and take them to a hazardous waste collection facility so the mercury can be safely managed. For more information, visit the Solid Waste Division Web site at: www.metrokc.gov/dnrp/swd/facilities/hazwaste.asp/.
More Operations

How Government Fleets Are Turning Connected Vehicle Data Into Practical Decisions
Public sector fleets are using connected technology to improve visibility, but the bigger challenge is building the processes to act on the information it provides.
Read More →
RoadFlex Brings Fuel Tax Compliance and Audit-Ready Reporting to Government, Public Works Fleets
New capabilities aim to help public-sector and public works fleets streamline fuel tax exemptions, reclamation, reconciliation, and audit-ready reporting.
Read More →
2026 Public Fleet Hall of Fame Inductees Honored
This year's class includes leaders whose work has helped shape the public fleet industry.
Read More →
David Renschler Receives 2026 Legendary Lifetime Achievement Award
Andy Campbell of Sourcewell, which partnered with Government Fleet in presenting the award, recognized Renschler.
Read More →
Ross Jackson Jr. Named 2026 Public Sector Fleet Manager of the Year
His leadership, innovation, and commitment to excellence earned him one of the industry's top honors.
Read More →
Public Fleet Professionals Set to Converge as GFX Gets Underway
Known as the largest gathering of public fleet professionals in the nation, GFX will feature in-depth training sessions, emerging fleet technologies, and access to leading suppliers and service providers.
Read More →
The Technician Pipeline: Finding, Keeping, and Promoting Techs Within the Operation
A look at where to find good talent, what fleets are doing to incentivize those techs to stay within the fleet, and what promotion looks like for a technician within the public sector.
Read More →
5 Public Fleet Stories Worth Revisiting Before GFX | The May Dispatch
Public fleet leaders are being asked to prepare for more, communicate better, and make decisions that hold up under pressure.
Read More →
Drive More Profit with Greater Fleet Uptime
Fleet downtime costs money. JASPER helps keep vehicles on the road with quality remanufactured components, fast nationwide delivery, and reliable solutions that boost uptime and profitability.
Read More →Are You Tracking Your Fleet's True Total Cost of Ownership?
Bobit Business Media surveyed 190 fleet professionals and found that while most fleets are tracking costs, fragmented systems and data gaps are keeping true TCO visibility out of reach. With rising pressure to control spend in an increasingly volatile environment, the gap between what fleets think they know and what the data actually shows is wider than you might expect. See how your peers are managing costs today and where the industry still has room to improve.
Read More →


