{"id":40774,"date":"2019-01-02T15:49:00","date_gmt":"2019-01-03T00:49:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/fireworks-spark-new-years-blaze\/"},"modified":"2019-01-02T15:49:00","modified_gmt":"2019-01-03T00:49:00","slug":"fireworks-spark-new-years-blaze","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/home\/fireworks-spark-new-years-blaze\/","title":{"rendered":"Fireworks spark New Year’s blaze"},"content":{"rendered":"
At around 2 a.m. New Year’s Day, Douglas resident Luann McVey awoke to a frightening sight.<\/p>\n
“I was awakened by orange light in our bedroom,” McVey said, “and looked out our window and saw a wall of flame on the side of the street.”<\/p>\n
The flames were coming from a flatbed trailer, where the remnants of fireworks boxes were stacked. Just a couple hours earlier, Douglas resident Brett McCurley had put on his biennial fireworks show on Sandy Beach — done on the Fourth of July and New Year’s Eve.<\/p>\n
The cardboard boxes left over from the show were all piled on the trailer, McCurley said, and he and his friends were checking on it every 20 minutes or so to make sure nothing reignited. Whatever happened to start the blaze happened quickly, he said.<\/p>\n
“It was just a shock to all of us,” McCurley said. “We try to make it to where everything that we do is safe. This time, we think that what happened was there was a little ember down there and there was a little breeze and it blew in there and started that little ember.”<\/p>\n