BEDMINSTER -- As President Donald Trump gears up for his summer vacation at the northern White House, the local aviation industry says his jaunts to Jersey have cast a "black cloud" over their business during peak flying season, costing them thousands in revenue.

The president has spent four weekends so far at his Bedminster golf club, each of which triggered a Federal Aviation Administration notice grounding all flights in and out of airports within a 10-nautical-mile radius and posting heavy restrictions stretching out 30 nautical miles.

Each of those trips has cost the two privately-owner airports -- Solberg Airport and Somerset Airport -- an estimated $10,000 in profits, according to Jack McNamara, chairman of the New Jersey Aviation Association.

And Trump's three-week August getaway is expected to be at least a $40,000 hit on the airport owners' bottom line, McNamara said.

"Summer time is the peak time for airports to do their business," he said. "Two-thirds [of their business] is done during the summer months into autumn."

The FAA issued a temporary flight restriction, or a TFR, last month for the area around Trump National Golf Club between Aug. 4 and 20, which will severely limit the 17 other airports in the larger area.

"Some could consider the POTUS TFR as inverse condemnation," co-owner of the Solberg Airport Suzanne Solberg Nagle said in an email to NJ Advance Media. "It places a 'black cloud' over the airports within the 30-nm radius."

Smaller airports make their money on fuel sales, maintenance, aircraft parking and rentals, and flight training.

Nagle said these restrictions could be "devastating" if they continue unchanged throughout Trump's presidency.

"Any kind of dent in the profit line is a hard hit," said McNamara, describing a struggling aviation business in New Jersey.

Local airport owners have met with Secret Service to ask for relief from restrictions, while still protecting the president when he stays in New Jersey, according to Nagle, who has served as a board member and executive director of the NJAA.

Thirty-two private companies that run nonstop routes out of the two airports to anywhere east of the Mississippi for deliveries, charters or medical emergencies will also be grounded, according to McNamara.

Hot air balloons, sky diving charters and glider pilots will also be unable to operate even within the larger restriction area because they can't meet the FAA regulations under the notice.

John Hurley, who has been flying for 21 years and rents a plane out of Solberg Airport, said he'll be grounded during the duration of the trip unless the owners move their planes to nearby airports.

That move would cost the owners at least $250 per day per plane, but McNamara said some may allow the planes to operate out of their airports as a courtesy.

Carl Giordano and Robert Vicci, both of whom fly weekly out of Somerset Airport, said they were excited about the president's visit and understood the restrictions, but felt bad for the airport owners.

"You're over that golf course in no time," Vicci said of taking off from the small public airport in Bedminster.

"I wish they would offer some relief," Giordano said.

Bedminster will recieve a reimbursement from the federal government to help offset the cost of Trump's visits.

Craig McCarthy may be reached at 732-372-2078 or at CMcCarthy@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @createcraig and on Facebook here. Find NJ.com on Facebook.

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