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Mossbrae Falls is breathtaking, but inaccessible
Less than half a mile from the city limits of Dunsmuir, Calif., a little railroad town in far Northern California, there is a waterfall so beautiful that people say it takes their breath away.
Mossbrae Falls, which is fed from glaciers on Mount Shasta's majestic slopes, tumbles across mossy cliffs in great curtains of water, and then down into the Sacramento River.

Though Mossbrae Falls sits less than 2,000 feet from Dunsmuir city limits, there is no easy — or legal — way for the public to access its misty splendors. (Neal Pritchard /Getty Images)
A century ago, the waterfall was a glorious tourist attraction. Southern Pacific Railroad ran special trains to it, where people could get out and take in the view and drink from the springs.
Dunsmuir officials, who are hoping to boost their town's economy, would like the waterfall to be an attraction again. But there is a problem: Though it is a short distance from a city park to the falls, there is no easy, or legal, way for the public to get there.
Every attempt to get access to the falls has floundered.
The land on one side of the river is owned by the Saint Germain Foundation, a religious group that considers the falls and Mount Shasta sacred and doesn't want the public wandering through.
The land on the other side of the river is owned by the Union Pacific Railroad. The tracks that run adjacent to the river are a major north-south artery for freight.
The city has been unable — so far — to get access from either party. Instead, according to a city study, tens of thousands of people each year risk their own safety by trespassing for more than a mile along oily train tracks. At least two people have been struck by trains near the falls since 2012. Others have reported terrifying near misses.
Now, city officials are trying to work with Union Pacific officials to build a trail that would cross the Sacramento River at Hedge Creek Falls and continue north to Mossbrae.
City Councilman Matthew Bryan, who has made access to the falls a key part of his agenda, said he believes the city and Union Pacific may finally be able to make it happen.
A small trail will cost more money than the small city of Dunsmuir has sitting around.
Dustin Rief, the city manager, said the costs of engineering alone may be as much as $2 million, even before construction starts. To raise money for the effort, the city last summer posted a sign at Hedge Creek Falls seeking public donations. The sign features a tantalizing photograph of the officially inaccessible Mossbrae Falls along with a QR code that allows people to donate using their phones. So far, $4,700 has come in, mostly in small increments, Rief said.
Poetic justice
If the railroad ultimately allows the city to build a trail — and that trail indeed brings in more tourist dollars — many locals say it would be poetic justice. After all, it is because of the railroad that this city exists at all. And it is also because of railroads that this city, decades after it was founded in the 1880s, almost died.
For years, many people who lived there were employed by the railroad, Bryan said, but then automation and other changes in the railroad industry meant the number of jobs shrank. And in 1991, there was a catastrophic train derailment north of town that spilled nearly 20,000 gallons of a highly toxic herbicide into the Sacramento River.
"This trail to Mossbrae is part of us reclaiming our community and our economy and our connection to the best water on Earth," said Bryan, the city council member.
The week's biggest stories

A beach campfire provides warmth at sunset on the Samoa Peninsula in Eureka on Sept. 2, 2022. (Myung J. Chun / Los Angeles Times)
A monster earthquake could sink a swath of California, dramatically heightening flood risk
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L.A. County approves $4-billion sex abuse settlement, the largest in U.S. history
LAFD union head made $540,000 in a year, with huge overtime payouts
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This week's must reads

Angela Halili, left, and Arielle Reitsma at Balboa Theatre on their For God So Loved the World tour. (Armond Feffer / For The Times)
Evangelism and Erewhon: They came to L.A. for the Hollywood dream, then shot to Bible stardom. As devout Christians spend less time in the pews and more time on social media, Christian influencers such as Angela Halili and Arielle Reitsma — with no formal training in ministry — have become unlikely religious authorities to a fan base larger than that of many of the nation's most popular preachers.
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For your weekend

Sidle up at the bar at Somerville in View Park-Windsor Hills, a sleek supper club from actor-producer Issa Rae and partners Yonnie Hagos and Ajay Relan. (Yasara Gunawardena / For The Times)
Going out
Staying in
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Have a great weekend, from the Essential California team
Kevinisha Walker, multiplatform editor
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