The Day

Guarding Trump’s Florida estate by cash-strapped Coast Guard has cost taxpayers $6.6 million

- By DREW HARWELL

As the Trump administra­tion threatened hefty budget cuts for the U.S. Coast Guard, the military service was spending more than $6.6 million protecting the president’s waterfront Mar-a-Lago Club during his seven weekend trips there this spring, documents show.

The Coast Guard deployed cutters, patrol boats, helicopter­s and anti-terror specialist­s from across the country to safeguard the luxury Palm Beach, Fla., estate.

The deployment­s came as Coast Guard leaders, bracing for possible budget cuts, have argued that the cash-strapped service has made painful sacrifices — letting some illegal drug shipments go and delaying certain repairs to its fleet.

The records, released Thursday to The Washington Post in response to a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request, offer a glimpse into the intricate costs and demands for a military force tasked with defending the president during his frequent getaways to his private businesses.

They also highlight how taxpayers have helped finance the unusually elaborate lifestyle of Trump and his family in ways that can also benefit his company. In this case, Mar-a-Lago, which Trump has dubbed a “Winter White House,” is also a for-profit, members-only club.

The Coast Guard has provided security for past presidents alongside the U.S. Secret Service, including guarding former President Barack Obama during trips such as his annual family vacations to Hawaii, but officials could not immediatel­y provide estimates for those costs.

When Obama spent a weekend in South Florida in 2013, the Coast Guard spent about $586,000 to cover patrol, travel and lodging costs, according to a Government Accountabi­lity Office report last year.

The spending at Mar-a-Lago, which comes to close to $1 million for each trip, appears to collide with the president’s pledges of trimming government costs.

The Coast Guard spent more than $17.8 million on presidenti­al security costs between October and March, offering air and waterside patrols for high-level events during the Obama and Trump administra­tions. That cost was up from $15.1 million in the same period ending in March 2016, and $10.7 million for the period ending in March 2015, Coast Guard records show.

The Coast Guard is brought in to protect Trump at official events as well as recreation­al excursions, including patrolling the Potomac River when the president plays golf at his Trump National Golf Club in Sterling, Va.

The Secret Service requested Coast Guard protection for Trump’s Mar-a-Lago visits, which are classified as “national special security events,” Coast Guard officials said. The club has represente­d an expensive challenge for the service, which patrols the airspace above the estate as well as its two coastlines along the Atlantic Ocean and the Intracoast­al Waterway.

The Coast Guard’s missions — including drug interdicti­ons and port patrols — sit at the center of some of Trump’s biggest campaign promises, including stricter immigratio­n and homeland security. But leaders say the military branch has struggled to complete its mission while faced with a tightening budget and aging fleet.

The Coast Guard’s commandant, Adm. Paul Zukunft, testified before a House subcommitt­ee on Tuesday that the branch was “deferring maintenanc­e” and running cutters and aircraft long beyond their retirement age because it needed more funding.

In a CBS interview that aired Tuesday, Zukunft added that the Coast Guard had not pursued hundreds of potential drug shipments last year because “we didn’t have enough planes, we didn’t have enough ships.”

The Coast Guard’s spending accounts for a fraction of the military security apparatus that has encircled Trump during journeys to his private clubs and golf courses. Congress this year allocated roughly $120 million in additional funding to help cover the Secret Service’s presidenti­al travel and protection, as well as “extraordin­ary law enforcemen­t personnel costs” incurred by local government­s during Trump’s trips.

The White House did not respond to requests for comment. Officials have in the past defended the costs as necessary to safeguard the president’s work, with White House spokeswoma­n Stephanie Grisham saying in February, “He is not vacationin­g when he goes to Mar-a-Lago. The president works nonstop every day of the week, no matter where he is.”

Coast Guard service members, specialist­s, pilots and engineers spent thousands of hours on patrol or support duties around the time of the president’s 25 days at Mar-aLago between February and April, records show.

Gun-mounted response boats manned by four-person tactical crews spent 1,866 hours on the water, or more than 77 full days, at a cost of about $2.8 million, the documents show.

They were joined by larger watercraft, including an 87-foot Marine Protector-class patrol boat and a 154-foot fast-response cutter, which watched for threats and kept out recreation­al boaters in three nearby “security zones.”

Back on land, teams of armory staff, mechanics and electronic­s specialist­s worked to keep the boats running and armed. Overhead, H-65 Dolphin helicopter­s, traditiona­lly used for water rescues, flew for 135 hours so as to intercept lowand slow-flying aircraft, at a cost of about $7,885 an hour.

Special anti-terror units, known as Maritime Safety and Security Teams, also deployed to Mar-a-Lago from Miami, New Orleans, Houston, Boston, New York and a naval submarine base in southeaste­rn Georgia.

Officials have in the past defended the costs as necessary to safeguard the president’s work, with White House spokeswoma­n Stephanie Grisham saying in February, “He is not vacationin­g when he goes to Mar-aLago. The president works nonstop every day of the week, no matter where he is.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States