Your adjudicated newspaper for Riverside County
desert
STAR
PRESORTED STANDARD US POSTAGE PAID Desert Hot Springs, CA PERMIT NO 00005
W E E K L Y
Friday, September 7, 2018 Vol. 12 No. 72
911 Never again!
Honoring the memory of the 9/11 victims at the KKL-JNF Living Memorial site in Jerusalem By Desert Star Staff As the world commemorated seventeen years since the 9/11 terror attacks in the United States, the Keren Kayemet LeIsrael-Jewish National Fund (KKL-JNF),
Jewish National Fund-USA (JNF) and the US Embassy in Israel held their annual memorial ceremony to honor those who perished. The 9/11 Living Memorial Monument is the only one outside of the United
States to include all the names of the 9/11 victims and reflects the shared values between Israel, the United States and the entire free world for peace and unity, and against terror. Attending the ceremony
was US Ambassador to Israel, H.E. Daniel Friedman; KKL-JNF Vice Chairman, Mr. Yair Lootsteen; Member of Knesset Nachman Shai, JNFUSA Chief Israel Officer, Mr. Eric Michaelson, as well as
other distinguished guests. Various delegations arrived from the United States and Israel for the ceremony, including United Airlines Continues on Page 3
Deadline Looms to Pass Bill on Controversial CA Water Project By Desert Star Staff SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Conservation advocates say it’s now or never to protect the aquifer underneath the Mojave Trails National Monument in the southern California desert. The state legislative session ends Friday, so supporters are urging state lawmakers to pass Senate Bill 120. It would require the controversial Cadiz Water Project to undergo state review, even as the Trump administration has moved to fast track it. David Lamfrom, California desert and wildlife program director for the National Parks Conservation Association, says the plan to transfer desert
water to seven southern California cities is flawed. “New science indicates that this project would drain 16 billion gallons of water per year from an ancient aquifer, which feeds desert springs – which are critical for native culture, for wildlife in the region and for our national parks and our national monuments.” The Trump administration has decided a federal review is unnecessary for the Cadiz project, and the developer maintains it would not harm the aquifer and would create jobs. The State Assembly passed SB 120 on Wednesday. It now needs a vote in the full Senate. Conservation groups worry that animals, including the
Conservation groups fear that Bonanza Spring in the Mojave National Preserve could dry up, endangering wildlife, if the Cadiz Water Project goes forward. (Michael Gordon)