DORAL, Fla. — The Trump golf resort in South Florida where President Donald Trump initially wanted to host this year’s Group of Seven summit has laid off 560 workers.

See:Being furloughed beats a layoff: What it means for millions of suddenly jobless Americans

A notice that the Trump National Doral Miami filed with the state of Florida at the end of last month said it would be forced to halt its business because of the spreading coronavirus.

The resort in metro Miami has been closed since mid-March. Al Linares, the resort’s director of human resources, wrote to state and city officials that its unknown when it will resume regular operations.

Trump pitched his Doral club as the host of a G-7 summit that had been planned for this June. A public outcry then greeted its selection from among a group of candidate sites, and ultimately the decision to have it play host to the world leaders was reversed. Associated Press

From the MarketWatch archives (October 2019):Plan to host G-7 at Trump-owned Doral resort reversed after fierce backlash

The laid-off workers are mostly food and beverage workers, golf attendants, housekeepers and bellhops. None of the workers are unionized.

The G-7 summit was to have been held June 10–12. The Doral plan was dropped amid criticism on ethical grounds — House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler labeled Doral’s initial selection as the event site “among the most brazen examples yet of the president’s corruption” — and the summit site switched to Camp David.

The plan to hold the summit in person was shelved on March 19 as the coronavirus pandemic intensified.