Law enforcement and state officials say the Soboba Reservation in southern California is too dangerous but that's not stopping a member of President Bush's Cabinet from speaking there on Friday.
Technically, Interior Secretary Dirk
Kempthorne will appear at the golf club owned by the Soboba Band of Luiseno
Indians. But the property is adjacent to the reservation and only a short distance from the tribe's casino, which law enforcement and state officials claim is unsafe.
Kempthorne will speak about H.R.4841,
the Soboba Band of Luiseño Indians Settlement Act of 2007, which was signed into law earlier this month. The bill provides $29 million and up to 2 billion gallons of water a year for the tribe and settles a 75-year-old dispute.
Tribal leaders and other politicians are also attending the ceremony at the Country Club at Soboba Springs.
Get the Story:
Secretary of Interior to speak on landmark tribal water rights legislation
(The Palm Springs Desert Sun 8/13)
Parolees don't have to move off Soboba Reservation after all, state says (The Riverside Press-Enterprise 8/14)
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Related Stories:
Soboba Band seeks state certification for
officers (8/13)
Hundreds attend Soboba Band forum on Public Law
280 (8/12)
Soboba Band forum on Public
Law 280 on Monday (8/8)
NIGC
visits Soboba casino amid fears of violence (8/8)
State orders parolees to leave Soboba Reservation
(8/7)
County sheriff won't attend Soboba
Band forum (8/5)
Sheriff worried about
more violence at Soboba (8/4)
Soboba water rights settlement signed into law (8/1)
Soboba Band water bill still
waiting on Bush (7/29)
Soboba water
settlement cleared for White House (7/25)
House passes Soboba Band water settlement
(5/22)
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