A 16-year-old boy was sentenced Monday to 15 days of detention and 168 hours of community service for his role in a fireworks blaze that destroyed a Felida home.
In an agreement with prosecutors, Nicholas E. McRaney, 16, of Vancouver, pleaded guilty in Clark County Juvenile Court to first-degree reckless burning. In exchange, Deputy Prosecutor Abbie Bartlett dismissed a charge of first-degree arson.
McRaney, a wrestler at Columbia River High School, along with co-defendant Andrew A. Perez-Garcia, 18, of Vancouver, had been accused of placing a fireworks device on the front lawn of the house and aiming it at a bush near the structure on July 4th. The bush caught on fire and spread to the eaves, attic and roof of the structure, Bartlett said. The fire destroyed the ranch-style home at 100 N.W. 108th St.
“It was a huge loss,” Bartlett said. “Some things can never be replaced.”
Renters at the home were displaced. The house’s owners, Corley and Nancy Woolridge, said Monday that they now are rebuilding the structure at a cost of about $330,000. The couple bought the home in 1977 and have lived in it off and on.