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Melania Trump Moves In

WASHINGTON (CNN) — The White House East Wing has thus far been functioning with a first lady in absentia — but soon, that will change. Melania Trump...
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WASHINGTON (CNN) — The White House East Wing has thus far been functioning with a first lady in absentia — but soon, that will change.

Melania Trump — who has performed duties as she can, when she can, during her brief visits to Washington over the past five months — has been far from a regular presence at the White House.

The most consecutive days the public has seen the first lady were in May abroad, when she accompanied President Donald Trump on his first international trip.

Her choice to remain in the couple’s New York City penthouse until their son, Barron, 11, finishes the school year, while unprecedented, but certainly is her prerogative as a parent as disruptions are impactful for children.

But, the time has come.

Melania Trump is finally moving in to the White House, possibly as soon as next week.

“The plan (to move) is for June, as it has always been, but there is no set date,” her director of communications, Stephanie Grisham, told CNN.

In February, Trump announced she had selected an interior designer, Tham Kannalikham, to decorate the family’s private living quarters in the White House — more than a dozen rooms — a job that presumably is now complete. Kannalikham did not return a request for comment.

“The first family’s move-in must be flawlessly executed,” said Rear Admiral Stephen Rochon, who served as director of the executive residence and chief usher at the White House under both Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, until 2011.

“Very importantly, décor of the rooms for Mrs. Trump and her son must be closely coordinated with the first lady’s interior decorator. Hopefully, many of these things were done before President Trump moved in more than 100 days ago,” Rochon said.

Rochon was succeeded by Angella Reid, whose surprise departure the White House announced last month with little explanation.

“She is no longer employed here at the White House,” said principal deputy press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders at the time. “We left on very good terms and wish her the very best and certainly hope for great things for her in the future.”

When he the White House in 2011 for a position at the Department of Homeland Security, Rochon made sure Reid was prepped for the arrival of the next President and his or her family.

“I left a detailed list, and met with (Reid) to answer any questions,” said Rochon. “I understand that Mrs. Trump’s son’s comfort is her top priority, so the chief usher must do everything possible not to disappoint her. (Moving to the White House) can, indeed, be organized chaos.”

But by the time the rest of the Trump family arrives, they should have everything they need at their fingertips. Clothes will be unpacked in the closets, settled in the bureaus; toys and books and personal items will already be set up per the first lady’s selection, the fridge stocked with favorite snacks preferred by the first lady and the littlest Trump.

A list of personal care products and brands used by the first family would likely already have been submitted for the East Wing staff to collect and have on hand.

“It’s definitely a ’10’ on the scale of exciting moves that we have handled,” says Chuck Kuhn, president and CEO of JK Moving Services, a Virginia-based moving company that has both moved presidents into — and out of — the White House, including both Bushes and the Clintons.

Kuhn said he hasn’t been involved with the Trump moves, but that he’d “welcome the opportunity” if asked. The movers go through background checks, and the trucks are inspected before going onto the grounds, said Kuhn. But from the driveway into the house, moving is handled by residence staff.

It’s up to the chief usher, or now the deputy usher, in the absence of a replacement for Reid, to oversee everyone — and take care of, well, everything.

“When I was there, we had 95 full-time staff members to include the ushers’ office, operations staff, who move furniture, rugs, et cetera,” said Rochon. “And then the executive chefs and pastry chefs, housekeepers, electricians, carpenters, engineers, plumbers, painters, florists and very importantly, the butlers, whom the first family sees, first and last, every day.”

In sum, it’s a lot. Melania Trump will rely heavily on the head usher, said Rochon, whose job it is to navigate requests on her behalf.

“The chief usher is the first lady’s primary contact in the executive residence to get anything done there,” he said, adding he suspects at this point the painters, carpenters and movers have already completed décor tasks.

“It’s the little things you miss,” said Michelle Obama to Oprah Winfrey at a women’s summit in Washington last June. She was talking about life inside the White House, and how just walking out the front door “without discussing it with anyone” becomes a big deal.

“Sasha opened her window once (in the White House) and there were calls. It never opened again,” Obama said.

The same restrictions and rules will be in place once Trump is a full-time resident as well.

“Even though FLOTUS and Barron are moving to the ’18 Acres,’ as the White House and its grounds are nicknamed, over time, all occupants inevitably feel trapped,” said Jonathan Wackrow, a CNN law enforcement analyst and former Secret Service Agent, who spent time on a first lady detail.

“In New York City, both of them basically hide in plain sight, blending into the fabric of the city is an easier task,” he said.

Living at the White House, Trump will become a focal point of the city of Washington itself, with every move watched by staff, press and the public.

“Privacy becomes the most craved desire, but it can be hard to come by,” said Wackrow, adding it falls to Melania Trump, as it did to Michelle Obama, to help her family adjust.

The addition of Secret Service, motorcades, sirens and armed guards is a jolt, said Wackrow, although it is likely helpful that Trump has had a significant taste of what that’s like for the past several months.

“The DC pressure is a new normal for the family. All of them, the President included, will need to find a tempo that works for them to create an environment that is their own,” Wachrow said.

For example, President Barack Obama often said it was helpful that he “lived above the store” so he could eat dinner with his family, before working later into the night.

“He and Mrs. Obama would also workout together in the mornings a good deal,” Wackrow said.

And while perhaps a morning bout of couples’ exercise won’t be on the Trump’s agenda, they will presumably find a way to co-habit inside the bubble of the Residence.

“They’ll do what works for them,” said Wackrow.

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