Workers from AES Electrical apparently went all out to make sure Donald Trump could open his luxury hotel on the day he wanted.
In
the frenzied final six weeks of work at the hotel, while Trump touted
the project on the campaign trail, AES of Laurel, Md., claims it
assigned 45 members of its staff to work 12-hour shifts for nearly 50
consecutive days to get the lights, electrical and fire systems prepared
on time.
“We
had people there well over 12 hours a day for weeks because they had a
hard opening of Sept. 12 and you can’t open if the lights don’t work and
the fire alarms don’t work and the fire marshal can’t inspect it,” said
Tim Miller, executive vice president of AES. “There is a lot of work that went into that hotel, and it didn’t happen by accident.”
Trump
got his wish: The hotel was ready enough that on Sept. 16 he held a
campaign event there honoring veterans, which was carried live on
national television. He touted the hotel as having been completed “under
budget and ahead of schedule” and said that when it opened officially
the following month it would be “one of the great hotels anywhere in the
world.”
But around the same time, Miller said, the
Trump Organization and its construction manager, Lendlease, stopped
paying AES. Three days before Christmas, AES filed a mechanic’s lien
with the D.C. government alleging that it was out almost $2.1 million. “Merry Christmas and a happy new year to us,” Miller said.
The AES filing brings the total of allegedly unpaid bills
on the hotel to more than $5 million. Washington-area plumbing firm
Joseph J. Magnolia Inc. and Northern Virginia construction
company, A&D Construction, are seeking $2.98 million and $79,700
respectively. (Continues at WaPo)
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