USA TODAY US Edition

Southwest Airlines flight attendant dies from COVID-19 after monthlong battle

Southwest and other airlines have not released statistics on the number of COVID-19 cases and deaths among flight crews.

- Dawn Gilbertson

A Southwest Airlines flight attendant based in Las Vegas died Tuesday from COVID-19, according to his family and co-workers.

Maurice “Reggie” Shepperson, a native New Yorker whose brightly colored pants earned him the nickname Skittles during training in 2014, tested positive for the coronaviru­s in early July and had been fighting it in a hospital for a month, according to Marcia Hildreth, a Southwest flight attendant who called him her best friend.

He was on a ventilator and died early Tuesday, his mother, Dawn Shepperson, told USA TODAY. A nurse

told her it was from COVID-19.

Shepperson, 36, was fully vaccinated, his mother and Hildreth said. He loved to fly and took every precaution, wearing a mask, constantly washing his hands, sanitizing surfaces and wiping everything down in hotel rooms, Hildreth said.

“It hurt me so bad because it was just so quick,” Dawn Shepperson said. “I didn’t have time to really even acknowledg­e what is going on. This is mindblowin­g. It’s not real. It’s not real. It’s not real.”

Hildreth said she’s in disbelief, too. “I’m going to miss my friend,” she said.

Southwest spokesman Brandy King confirmed a Las Vegas-based employee died Tuesday but declined to provide details. Shepperson’s mother said the airline reached out to her, and Hildreth said Southwest contacted her after Shepperson’s death and pulled her from a work trip, so she could fly home to Las Vegas Wednesday.

“We are heartbroke­n over the loss of our Southwest employee,” King said in a statement. “Out of respect for the family, we do not have additional informatio­n to share.”

Southwest and other airlines have not released statistics on the number of COVID-19 cases and deaths among flight crews. The Associatio­n of Flight Attendants-CWA, which represents flight attendants at United, Frontier, Spirit and Hawaiian airlines, among others, estimated that 4,000 flight attendants across all airlines in the USA have contracted the virus and 20 have died.

Shepperson worked throughout the pandemic and was pulled from work several times because of COVID-19 exposure, Hildreth said. He never tested positive until July, she said.

Co-workers called Shepperson a high flyer: He picked up more work trips than most, partly to make money, partly to travel wherever he could.

Kiki Lee was in Shepperson’s flight attendant training class in 2014 in Dallas, where Southwest is based.

After five weeks of training, she and other newly-minted flight attendants just wanted to go home. Shepperson started using his employee flight perks. One of the first trips, Lee recalls, was to China.

“He was hitting the skies right way, using his benefits,” Lee said. “He loved working, and he loved the perks.”

Shepperson’s Facebook page shows his travel adventures, including several work trips to Hawaii. In June, he took his mother along for the ride. His mother said that was one of his last work trips for Southwest before he tested positive.

“He loved travel, and anybody who knew him knew he loved his mother,” Lee said.

Travis Pittman, another Las Vegasbased flight attendant for Southwest, met Shepperson when he relocated to Nevada from Tampa in 2016.

“That New York exterior can come off hard and all that,” he said. “But he was just like a teddy bear, so sweet on the inside and very, very loving. Just very fun to be around.”

Dawn Shepperson said Reggie, whom she raised on her own after his father died when he was 14 months old, made her proud every time she walked through a Southwest terminal at an airport.

“People that I don’t even know, once they find out I’m Reggie’s mother said, ‘Ma’am, you did a beautiful job. This is a fine young man,’” she said. “As a mother, I feel so blessed and proud because that’s all I wanted in life was to raise my son right.”

 ?? PROVIDED BY MARCIA HILDRETH ?? Southwest Airlines flight attendants Marcia Hildreth and Reggie Shepperson often traveled together for work. Shepperson died Aug. 10 from COVID-19.
PROVIDED BY MARCIA HILDRETH Southwest Airlines flight attendants Marcia Hildreth and Reggie Shepperson often traveled together for work. Shepperson died Aug. 10 from COVID-19.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States