President Donald Trump’s arrival in Palm Beach County for another weekend stay at his Mar-a-Lago Club will once more coincide with Friday rush hour.

That, combined with a protest planned for Sunday as Trump heads back to Palm Beach International Airport to take Air Force Back to Washington, D.C., could make for busy roads in and near West Palm Beach this weekend.

Trump is slated to arrive at PBIA sometime close to 5:15 p.m. Friday, according to a Federal Aviation Administration temporary flight restriction issued for the area. The president will be in town for his second weekend in a row in Palm Beach, as he spends time talking trade with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.

»COMPLETE COVERAGE: Donald Trump in Palm Beach

That sets up rush hour commuters in West Palm Beach and the area near PBIA to once again face delays, after Trump’s motorcade tied up traffic for about an hour when he arrived at the airport about 4:30 p.m. last Friday.

Palm Beach officials on Wednesday announced they are launching a traffic plan to handle the gridlock that overtook the island last Friday after the Secret Service closed South Ocean Boulevard near Trump’s estate for the weekend, a closure residents can expect with each visit from Trump.

The town’s "presidential visit seasonal traffic mitigation plan" begins this Friday and will be in effect each Friday through May 1.

One measure will be monitoring of key intersections on and near the island, so town and county officials can manually change traffic signals as needed to help congestion.

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The town also is changing schedules for Public Works crews, and landscapers will have to leave the island by 3 p.m. each Friday. Schedules for the three bridges connecting West Palm Beach and Palm Beach will be affected, with town officials saying they will ask the Coast Guard to OK special schedules to limit opening times.

While no protest march is planned at this time — the one that took place last Saturday drew an estimated 3,000 people to a route that stretched from Trump Plaza in downtown West Palm Beach south along Flagler Drive to Southern Boulevard — one activist group says it will rally along Southern as Trump’s motorcade leaves Mar-a-Lago.

Indivisible - The Resistance, which has a similar name to but is different from one of the original organizing groups of this past weekend’s March to Mar-a-Lago, is encouraging people to line Southern from Flagler Drive to Palm Beach International Airport while carrying signs against the Dakota Access, Keystone XL and Sabal Trail pipelines. The Sabal Trail line is a 685-mile natural gas pipeline that is slated to deliver fuel to Florida Power & Light Co.’s South Florida plants.

By spreading along Southern’s sidewalks as Trump’s motorcade carries him to Air Force One at PBIA, "he cannot avoid but to see us standing in solidarity and opposition," the group said in a news release.

No time has been listed for the Sunday protest, but organizer Michelle Kendall said an update will be posted on the protest’s Facebook event when she has a better idea of Trump’s departure time. According to the FAA’s flight restrictions, Trump is expected to depart PBIA close to 10 p.m. Sunday.

Kendall said she was inspired to organize the protest after hearing that after Trump signed a pair of executive orders addressing the Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipelines, the president said, "I don’t even think it was controversial. You know, I approved them and I haven’t even heard one call from anybody saying, ‘Oh, that was a terrible thing you did.’"

"Someone has to stand up," Kendall said. "He has to know that it does matter, that we do care."

Sunday’s protest location should provide some relief to residents north of Southern Boulevard along Flagler Drive, the route chosen for last week’s march.

"We don’t want to wear out the people who live near him. It’s not their fault," Kendall said.

And while the opportunity is there for a protest along Southern Boulevard as Trump arrives Friday evening, Kendall decided that would be too dangerous, both for motorists and protesters.

On Sunday, some protesters also will carry trash bags — they plan to clean up the area after the protest is over.

"This is an environmental event," Kendall said. "Our goal is to leave it better than we found it."

Protesters have promised to rally every time Trump visits Palm Beach County.

More than 300 people packed the Palm Beach County library off Hagen Ranch Road in west Delray Beach for a planning meeting hosted by South Florida Activism.

"I have seen in the media that what we are doing is making him a prisoner in the White House. That’s great. I don’t want him to ever feel comfortable in Palm Beach County. Period,’’ said South Florida Activism’s Star Fae, addressing the crowd Tuesday night.