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Security, parking, garbage irk Ivanka Trump's D.C. neighbours

​Residents of a posh Washington neighbourhood say Ivanka Trump and her family don't make for very good neighbours, taking up much of the parking on an already crowded street and leaving trash bags at the curb for days.

Street has been 'a three-ring circus' since they moved in, one neighbour says

The home of Ivanka Trump, her husband, White House senior adviser Jared Kushner, and their three children is in a posh Washington, D.C., neighbourhood about three kilometres from the White House. (Alex Brandon/Associated Press)

​Residents of a posh Washington neighbourhood say Ivanka Trump and her family don't make for very good neighbours, taking up much of the parking on an already crowded street and leaving trash bags at the curb for days. A big part of the complaint: a huge security presence, with even a trip to the playground requiring three vans. 

Neighbours of Trump, her husband Jared Kushner and their three children have groused that sidewalks have been closed, public parking overrun and that the family and their staff haven't learned the trash pickup schedule outside their $5.5-million US home. 

"It has been a three-ring circus from the day that they've moved in," Marietta Robinson, who lives across the street, told with The Associated Press. 

White House senior adviser Jared Kushner, holding the hand of daughter Arabella and carrying son Joseph, and Ivanka Trump, carrying son Theodore, step off Air Force One. The family has raised the ire of their neighbours in the Washington, D.C., neighbourhood of Kalorama. (Alex Brandon/Associated Press)

The house in the Kalorama neighbourhood was bought in December by a company with ties to a Chilean billionaire. The company is renting it to Kushner and Trump, who moved in just after the inauguration of her father, U.S. President Donald Trump. Both work in the White House as advisers to the president. 

Residents of the enclave of four- and five-storey townhomes and elegant single-family properties about three kilometres north of the White House are accustomed to VIP neighbours. Former president Barack Obama and his family have lived there since he left office, and the Secret Service closed off their entire block to traffic. Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos bought a home there, and Secretary of State Rex Tillerson also moved in recently. 

Yet no one has raised the ire of the community like the Trumps. At a recent neighbourhood commission meeting, Fox News anchor Chris Wallace was among those who showed up to complain about parking problems. 

Some in the neighbourhood have also complained about the family's rental arrangement. The company that owns the house didn't obtain a rental licence for two months, securing one just this week after it was warned by city regulators. 

"Maybe some of the upset has to do with politics a little. I couldn't say for sure, but I know that people don't seem to be upset about Tillerson's situation. It's much less intrusive," said Ellen Goldstein, an elected neighbourhood commissioner. 

Secret Service outside 'staring meanly'

The Secret Service has sole responsibility under law for protecting the family, but neighbours have noticed what they describe as an unusually large and aggressive security presence.

Ivanka Trump arrives and departs in a four-vehicle motorcade, Robinson said. 

"There are more of them than I have ever seen," Robinson wrote in a letter to Democratic Mayor Muriel Bowser and other city officials. "Frequently several of them are milling outside of the house at all hours, having conversations and staring meanly at anyone in view." 

A security warning sign on a barricade in front of the Trump-Kushner home in the Kalorama neighbourhood of Washington, D.C. (Alex Brandon/Associated Press)

The letter — which also complained about parking, trash and noise — spurred the city government into action. On Friday morning, D.C. transportation crews were outside the house, removing "No Parking" signs. 

The department said no permits had been sought for parking exemptions or sidewalk closures on the street since Trump moved in. Yet vehicles associated with the Trump-Kushner house have been seen parking in the restricted areas for hours at a time, and barriers have been erected on the sidewalk in front of the house, forcing pedestrians to cross the street, next-door neighbour Rhona Wolfe Friedman said.

Even without extra restrictions, street parking for non-residents is limited to two hours. 

"The parking patrol on Tracy Place has always been ultra-vigilant," Robinson wrote to the mayor. "Suddenly, the
parking enforcement has disappeared." 

A Secret Service spokeswoman, Nicole Mainor, said agency officials met with neighbours and city officials on Friday morning and addressed their concerns about parking and other disruptions. She declined to answer specific questions about the level of protection the family receives, citing agency policy. 

Rhona Wolfe Friedman, who lives next door to the Trump-Kushner family, says they don't make for very good neighbours, hogging parking on an already crowded street and leaving trash bags rotting on the curb. (Alex Brandon/Associated Press)

It's not clear whether Ivanka Trump is aware of any complaints, saying in a statement emailed Friday afternoon by an aide: "We love the neighbourhood and our family has received an incredibly gracious welcome from our neighbours."

Christopher Chapin, president of the neighbourhood council — who doesn't live as close as the neighbours who've complained — said all the attention is good for Kalorama. 

"We are delighted to have political figures like the Obamas, the Kushners and the Tillersons living in our neighbourhood," he said.