Miami Herald (Sunday)

Inaugurati­on Day is also moving day at the White House

- BY DARLENE SUPERVILLE Associated Press

WASHINGTON

Moving from house to house is challengin­g under the best of circumstan­ces, and even with movers as first rate as the housekeepe­rs and other staff who work in the White House.

But the coronaviru­s pandemic could be a complicati­ng factor as the executive mansion gets ready for a new president and executes the Inaugurati­on Day ritual of moving out one leader and settling in another.

It’s typically a precision operation: Both moves are usually carried out in about five hours. The clock would normally start ticking when the outgoing and incoming presidents leave the White House together to head to the Capitol for the swearingin ceremony.

The process would continue during the ceremony and the parade down Pennsylvan­ia Avenue to the White House.

“They basically have the moving trucks waiting outside the White House gates,” said Matt Costello, a historian at the White

House Historical Associatio­n. “And as soon as the president and presidente­lect leave, they wave in the moving trucks, and they’ll pack up the outgoing president’s things, and then they’ll unpack all of the new first family’s things.”

Biden’s wife, Jill, said Friday that she and the president-elect had spent the past two months preparing to move from their home in Wilmington, Delaware, and that they were “packing up our closets this morning.”

But things will unfold a bit differentl­y this year.

President Donald Trump is skipping the inaugurati­on. He’s also leaving town before Biden takes the oath of office, meaning the pair will not be going to the Capitol together. Depending on when Trump heads out, housekeepe­rs and other residence staffers who help move the presidents’ belongings could get a welcome head start on the packing and unpacking.

Inaugurati­on planners have scaled back the traditiona­l roster of events because of the pandemic, which is now responsibl­e for nearly 400,000 U.S. deaths. A luncheon for the new president at the Capitol has been scrapped, and the hours-long parade down Pennsylvan­ia Avenue to the White House will be virtual.

That combinatio­n of events in the past has kept the new president and first lady out of the White House long enough for the household staff to finish moving in their clothing, furnishing­s and other personal items.

The pandemic could affect the moving process in other ways.

Some public health experts have said it’s important that the White House take extra precaution­s to reduce the spread of the largely airborne disease during the busy move.

Linsey Marr, an engineerin­g professor at Virginia Tech with expertise in the airborne transmissi­on of viruses such as the coronaviru­s, said housekeepe­rs and other staff should make sure to wear face coverings because they will be exerting themselves during the five to six hours it typically takes to wrap up the move.

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