Millions spent guarding Confederate graves
ALTON, Ill. — After last year’s deadly clash between white nationalists and counterprotesters in Charlottesville, Virginia, the federal government has quietly spent millions of dollars to hire private security guards to stand watch over at least eight Confederate cemeteries, documents from the Department of Veterans Affairs show.
The security effort, which runs around the clock at all but one of those VA-operated cemeteries, was aimed at preventing the kind of damage that befell Confederate memorials across the U.S. in the aftermath of the Charlottesville violence.
None of the guarded cemeteries has been vandalized since the security was put in place. Records obtained by The Associated Press through the Freedom of Information Act show that the VA has spent nearly $3 million on cemetery security since August 2017. Another $1.6 million is budgeted for fiscal 2019 to pay for security at all Confederate monuments, which could include other sites. The agency has not determined Bert Cambron, left, and Mark Wilson of Dayton National Cemetery remove the vandalized statue of a Civil War Confederate soldier from Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery in August 2017. when the security will cease.
Private security was needed “to ensure the safety of staff, property and visitors paying respect to those interred,” Jessica Schiefer, spokeswoman for the VA’s National Cemetery Administration, said in a statement. The agency “has a responsibility to protect the federal property it administers and will continue to monitor and assess the need for enhanced security.”
Most of the protected cemeteries are in the North,
in places far removed from the Confederacy. Vast numbers of the buried soldiers were prisoners of war who were held nearby. Many succumbed to smallpox and other diseases. The cemetery monuments are typically simple and solemn, serving more to acknowledge the deceased than to celebrate the slave-holding nation they defended.
Government watchdog groups and some members of Congress question if the spending is still necessary. Steve Ellis, executive vice president of the nonpartisan Taxpayers for Common Sense, said the cost of security represents the sort of “spending inertia” too common in government.
“Unfortunately what happens with the government is once you start spending money on something, you generally continue to spend money on it,” Ellis said.
Democratic Rep. Bobby Rush of Chicago, whose district includes one of the protected cemeteries, said in a statement that while he supports the VA’s decision to prevent vandalism, officials “must remain vigilant in evaluating” government spending.
Monuments to the Confederacy have become especially polarizing since nine black parishioners were gunned down in 2015 by an avowed white supremacist at a church in Charleston, South Carolina.
The confrontation in Charlottesville on Aug. 11, 2017, reopened the wound. In the weeks that followed, vandals damaged Confederate sites across the country.
A bronze statue of a rebel soldier was toppled and decapitated Aug. 22, 2017, at Camp Chase Confederate Cemetery in Columbus. Two days later, the VA contracted with the Westmoreland Protection Agency, based in Sunrise, Florida, to provide unarmed security guards at Camp Chase and two other cemeteries — North Alton Confederate Cemetery in Alton, Illinois, and Woodlawn National Cemetery in Elmira, New York.
The 30-day contract cost $91,357, according to the documents.
About a week later, someone threw paint on a 117-year-old Confederate memorial at Springfield National Cemetery in Missouri, hours before President Donald Trump was scheduled to speak in Springfield.
On Sept. 6, 2017, the VA amended the monthly contract to add Springfield and four additional national Confederate cemeteries, including Confederate Stockade Cemetery in Sandusky.
All told, the VA spent about $462,500 on security through Oct. 23, 2017, when it agreed to an annual contract with Westmoreland at a cost of about $2.3 million. Westmoreland hired The Whitestone Group, based in Columbus, as a subcontractor.