With great sadness comes this story that a Reno man by the name of Scott “Spoono” Stephenson has passed away in advance of Burning Man's opening.
Scott Stephenson was said to be helping build Black Rock City when he died Wednesday night on the playa. Stephenson was in his late 50s and died “in the city he loved most.” Stephenson was a member of Burning Man's Department of Public Works which builds Black Rock City over the course of August.
A medical exam will be performed in Washoe County, while Burning Man officials believe that Stephenson died of natural causes.
The full text of Burning Man's letter to staff can be read below:
Burning Man announced today the loss of beloved Department of Public Works staff member Scott “Spoono” Stephenson. Spoono passed away overnight on the playa, in the city he loved most.
Stephenson was in his late 50s and died of apparent natural causes, according to Pershing County officials. Stevenson had been in Gerlach and on the playa since April supporting construction of Black Rock City. His passing will have an enormous impact on the Burning Man community.
“Spoono has been a fixture of our DPW since 2005,” said Burning Man CEO Marian Goodell. “In 2005 he was one of the first to depart for Mississippi to help residents in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, working, among other things, as a cook for the team that grew to become Burners Without Borders. He will be missed by many of us including myself.”
Spoono was a founding crew member of Black Rock Solar, working tirelessly to install solar arrays across Nevada for those who would benefit most – schools, hospitals, tribes, and other non-profit organizations – for six years. He'd been a Runner for DPW's purchasing department for 10 years and cooked for work weekends for equally as long, as well as handling cooking for early arrival crews on the ranch for several years. He was on point to cook for the Man crew when we had to rebuild the man in 2007.
“Spoon was a deeply generous man, with a huge heart, who gave so much love and care though his food,” said Tom Price, one of the founders of Burners Without Borders and founding Executive Director of Black Rock Solar. “He was a miracle worker with food—I once watched him feed 15 volunteers for a week with only $50. He always worked himself to exhaustion, but didn't have a lick of quit in him—there was never a morning you woke up he didn't have coffee on, strong enough to strip paint. And if you were really good, or really lucky, it came with a side of piping hot beignets.”
Spoono embodied the best of Burning Man values and culture. He was generous to a fault, giving all that he had to the community he loved. He will be missed by all who knew him.
Burning Man is providing support and grief counseling to staff and volunteers on the playa during this difficult time.
Plans for a celebration of life and memorial service will be announced shortly.