Tuesday night’s special election in Georgia offered an early referendum on just how damaging proximity to President Donald Trump can be. In the race to fill a House seat left vacant by Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price, a 30-year-old Democrat who doesn’t even live in the district walked away with the most votes in a ruby-red portion of the state, very nearly reaching the 50 percent threshold needed to avoid a runoff in June. The Republican candidates most closely aligned with the president fared the worst.

A few hundred miles to the south, the residents of Palm Beach have also seen the downside of embracing Trump, whose frequent trips to Mar-a-Lago have been bleeding the town dry. Each of the seven trips the president has taken to his private club since taking office have caused extensive traffic jams, shut down air spaces that local helicopter and tour companies usually rely on to make money, and cost the town so much money in police overtime that it will reportedly have to raise local taxes or somehow convince the Trump Organization to pay up to offset the crippling costs associated with transforming the gilded 126-room estate into the “Southern White House.”

Now, a small New Jersey township is bracing for its own looming propinquity to the president. According to Politico, residents in Bedminster, where Trump often spends summer weekends at his country club, are concerned about the possibility of frequent presidential visits and the strain they will put on the town’s resources once the heat grows too oppressive in South Florida. Given that plans to add a 500-square-foot, two-story balcony and porch onto Trump’s villa were approved by the town land-use board last month, it is clear the Trumps are coming, and coming to stay.

Local residents got a taste of what it’s like to have Trump in town during his transition period last fall, when his motorcade rolled in from Manhattan and brought traffic to a halt with road closures and added congestion. Now that the president is in office, it’s unclear how he will travel to town and even less clear how Bedminster will pay for it all. Politico reports that town officials have been scratching their heads for months trying to figure out who will pay for all the extra overtime work.

Bedminster mayor Steve Parker estimated that seven 72-hour Trump visits could cost the town more than $300,000 in overtime, according to a letter he wrote to a New Jersey congressman. He requested funding from the Justice Department, but still does not have details on what funding will be made available to the town.

Local aviators are also concerned about what flight restrictions could mean for business while the president is in town. “That’s bad for Somerset. Shuts us down when he’s there,” Lorne Sheren, the senior aviation medical examiner at a privately-owned public airport in the area, told Politico.

While Trump’s visits could be a heavy financial burden and day-to-day nuisance for many residents, they do stand to benefit some in town. Just as members of Mar-a-Lago have gotten a front row seat to interactions with visiting diplomats and high-ranking officials in the Trump administration, members of his New Jersey club will get the same opportunity to rub elbows, peddle influence, and witness a sitting president in action. Last fall, an audio recording caught the then president-elect offering his members a chance to stop by as he interviewed candidates to fill cabinet positions.

“You are the special people,” he told a group of about 100 club members. Everyone else in town gets to pay for them.