Charlottesville spent nearly $33,000 on the police response to a Ku Klux Klan rally last month.

About 50 members of the Loyal White Knights came to Charlottesville on July 8 to protest the removal of a statue honoring Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee. They were met by more than 1,000 protesters condemning the rally.

Officials tell local news media outlets that the response cost the Charlottesville Police Department about $32,835.

You can find a full breakdown of the city's costs

.

The city says the total includes more than $23,000 in personnel costs, including nearly $16,300 in overtime for Charlottesville police officers. Money was also spent on things like food, gas masks and helmets.

There were other costs involved, including special maps, flex cuffs and cutters, a portable TV tripod stand, a hitch for a department vehicle so it could pull riot gear, logistical and command center supplies, a power converter for the logistical van, food, Gatorade, and gas for two UTVs that totaled more than $5,850.

The police department's quartermaster also made several purchases includes battery packs for a Taser X26, non-lethal equipment, gas masks, megaphones, binoculars, coolers and sunscreen that cost more than $3,570.

The SWAT team also paid for expedited shipping on helmets that cost $51.

These numbers do not include the costs incurred by the Virginia State Police, the Albemarle County Police Department or the Albemarle County Sheriff's Office, all of which provided law enforcement for the rally.

About two dozen people were arrested after the rally had ended.