United States Coast Guard (USCG) districts schedule cutters 180 feet or less in length to weekly statuses (statuses is USCG jargon for assignments) from which they primarily respond to calls for search and rescue, law enforcement, and pollution control. The First Coast Cuard District, based in Boston, has one of the largest scheduling problems: Each of 16 cutters is assigned weekly to one of six statuses to ensure patrol coverage, enforce equitable distribution of patrols, and honor restrictions on consecutive cutter statuses. When the authors state this quarterly scheduling problem as an elastic mixed-integer linear program, they obtain face-valid schedules-superior to manually prepared schedules for all measures of effectiveness considered-within a few minutes on a personal computer. Initial acceptance of the model was hampered by disruptive schedule revisions that resulted from minor changes in input. Modifications to preserve run-to-run persistence of solutions have brought success.