After the group goes too far, a different hospital picks up the phone and tries to help them.
You can watch a trailer for the horror anthology "Night Terrors" below:Los Angeles is losing its last lumber mills.
The end of the industry in California's Inland Empire and Santa Ana marks the closing of the last of the last, a development that follows a wave of closures in Northern California. The industry dates back more than 100 years, when lumber mills used to dot the California coast. After logging moved inland, however, only one mill remained open in California — in Big Bear, in the Sierra Nevada foothills.
The closings have been brewing since at least 2010, when a Chinese company purchased the rights to build a lumber mill on the Santa Ana River. The mill never got built, but the company still owns the rights to the property, according to the Times. Over the past five years, as the mill sat empty, the closure of the local lumber mills in Santa Ana, Riverside and Moreno Valley has become a tale of business and gentrification.
The Santa Ana mill closed this summer after its operator, Hanmi, filed for bankruptcy. Hanmi said the mill was losing money, and the city sued to block the closure.
In Moreno Valley, a longstanding lumber business in the city that's been owned by the same family since the 1930s, the North American Forest Corp. shut down its sawmill in 2014. Last year, company owner William Burroughs died. Since then, the mill and the adjacent property have sat empty.
Big Bear's last mill closed in 2017, and the city went to court to try to save it. The mill's owner, a family that owns about 70% of the business, said it was losing money and wasn't sure if it could afford to continue the mill. The community rallied and won a temporary injunction to keep the mill open. That has led to the mill's current owners to shift the focus of the mill — a move that has, some say, split the community.
The loss of that mill has been a setback for Big Bear, since it has long been viewed as a reliable source of employment and infrastructure. The mill had a river that provided fresh water for a nearby reservoir, a 5,000-foot power line, as well as transportation to get a person to the city's airport and to school.
"We've lost a large segment of our community. We've lost a large employer
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