TrackCorona is co-run by Stanford CS major Bilguunzaya Battogtokh ’21. Her team includes three other undergraduates: Soukarya Ghosh and James Yun of the University of Virginia and Austin Stout of Virginia Tech. The map updates every hour. It is not perfect, and any information observed on the map should be verified independently.
Check back here for updates on the coronavirus outbreak and Stanford’s response. Have a coronavirus question you want answered or a tip you want us to investigate? Reach out to us at [email protected] or via our anonymous tip form. Share your own experiences with us using this form.
Click here to view more data visualizations of the outbreak in the Bay Area.
Stanford community members have been compiling emergency resources for students impacted by coronavirus and redistribution resources for those who are able to help.
May 21
3:48 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 37 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,418 yesterday to 2,453 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county reported no new deaths from COVID-19, keeping the total at 135.
There are 75 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 91 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 50,570 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 426 of those patients who have been tested.
May 17
5:11 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 37 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,418 yesterday to 2,453 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county reported no new deaths from COVID-19, keeping the total at 135.
There are 75 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 91 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 50,570 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 426 of those patients who have been tested.
May 16
2:44 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 15 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total from 2,403 yesterday to 2,418 today. The county reported no new deaths from COVID-19, keeping the total at 135.
There are 91 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, the same number as yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 48,863 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 235 of those patients who have been tested.
May 15
Santa Clara County reported 18 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,391 yesterday to 2,403 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county also reported one new death from COVID-19, bringing the total to 135.
There are 91 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 84 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 47,267 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboard. The county is awaiting results for 225 of those patients who have been tested.
May 14
4:15 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 15 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,381 yesterday to 2,391 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county also reported two new deaths from COVID-19, bringing the total to 134.
There are 84 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 100 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
A previous version of this post incorrectly stated that there are 100 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 84 as of yesterday. The Daily regrets this error.
As of today, 45,113 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboard. The county is awaiting results for 213 of those patients who have been tested.
May 13
Santa Clara County reported 21 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,364 yesterday to 2,381 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county also reported two new deaths from COVID-19, bringing the total to 132.
There are 100 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, the same number as yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 43,572 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboard. The county is awaiting results for 216 of those patients who have been tested.
May 12
Santa Clara County reported 28 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,341 yesterday to 2,364 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county also reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the total to 130.
There are 100 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 102 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 42,720 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboard. The county is awaiting results for 225 of those patients who have been tested.
May 11
Santa Clara County reported seven new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,339 yesterday to 2,341 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county reported no new deaths from COVID-19 today.
There are 102 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 95 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 41,750 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 225 of those patients who have been tested.
May 10
1:04 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 32 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total from 2,307 yesterday to 2,339 today. The county also reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the total to 129.
There are 95 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 107 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 40,651 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 235 of those patients who have been tested.
May 9
Santa Clara County reported 19 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,290 yesterday to 2,307 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county reported no new deaths from COVID-19 for the first time this month.
There are 107 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 111 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 39,414 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 237 of those patients who have been tested.
May 8
2:32 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 11 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,281 yesterday to 2,290 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county also reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the total to 128.
There are 111 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 113 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 38,002 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 229 of those patients who have been tested.
May 7
4:09 p.m. PT Stanford is aware of 50 people “who are connected to the Stanford community either as faculty, staff, students or postdocs and who have received positive COVID-19 test results,” the University noted in an update to its website today. The total had risen to 48 as of yesterday.
1:18 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 19 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,268 yesterday to 2,281 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county also reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the total to 127.
There are 113 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 123 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 36,691 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 231 of those patients who have been tested.
May 6
1:38 p.m. PT Stanford is aware of 48 people “who are connected to the Stanford community either as faculty, staff, students or postdocs and who have received positive COVID-19 test results,” the University noted in an update to its website on Wednesday. The total had been at 41 since Monday.
1:02 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 17 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,255 yesterday to 2,268 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county reported five more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the total to 126.
There are 123 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 131 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 35,195 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 212 of those patients who have been tested.
May 5
4:15 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 13 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,244 yesterday to 2,255 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county reported four more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the total to 121.
There are 132 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 131 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
May 4
9:34 p.m. PT Stanford is aware of 41 people “who are connected to the Stanford community either as faculty, staff, students or postdocs and who have received positive COVID-19 test results,” the University noted in an update to its website on Monday. The total had been at 40 since Friday.
2:11 p.m. PT As of today, 33,396 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 182 of those patients who have been tested.
1:04 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 18 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,231 yesterday to 2,244 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county reported two more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the total to 117.
There are 131 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 140 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
May 3
12:55 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 32 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,204 yesterday to 2,231 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the total to 115.
There are 140 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 141 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 32,281 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 175 of those patients who have been tested.
May 2
2:37 p.m. PT Stanford is aware of 40 people “who are connected to the Stanford community either as faculty, staff, students or postdocs and who have received positive COVID-19 test results,” the University noted in an update to its website on Friday. The total had been at 39 since April 21.
1:50 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 26 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,179 yesterday to 2,204 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the total to 114.
There are 141 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 144 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 30,734 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 199 of those patients who have been tested.
May 1
5:16 p.m. PT “Based on the current language of the county orders, face coverings must be worn in all university buildings except residences, where different rules apply,” Stanford wrote today. “Additional information will be provided to students over the weekend regarding student residences.”
“A limited number of face coverings will be available on Monday for students who have not yet been able to procure their own, and information will be coming over the weekend regarding distribution,” the University added.
4:36 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 21 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,163 yesterday to 2,179 today. It is unclear why this increase is less than the reported new cases. The county reported two more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the total to 113.
There are 144 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 150 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 29,614 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 196 of those patients who have been tested.
April 30
7:17 p.m. PT Stanford will require “faculty, staff, postdocs and students employed by the university to complete [a 10-minute] online training … before returning to work on campus, starting with those … currently working onsite at any University-owned location,” Stanford announced today.
6:21 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 31 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,134 yesterday to 2,163 today. It is unclear why two cases were subtracted from the total. The county also reported four more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the total to 111.
There are 150 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 164 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 27,502 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 183 of those patients who have been tested.
April 29
2:25 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 25 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,122 yesterday to 2,134 today. It is unclear why 13 cases were subtracted from the total. The county also reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the total to 107.
There are 164 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 182 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
April 28
2:30 p.m. PT “We do not expect to be able to make decisions about the fall quarter until sometime in June,” wrote Stanford President Marc Tessier-Lavigne in an announcement today. “… We will be in communication with students to provide information just as soon as we can.”
Santa Clara County reported 20 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,105 yesterday to 2,122 today. It is unclear why three cases were subtracted from the total. The county also reported three more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the total to 106.
There are 182 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 172 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 26,640 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 200 of those patients who have been tested.
April 27
9 p.m. PT Santa Clara County and five other Bay Area counties announced that they will extend their stay-at-home orders through the end of May.
2:43 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 23 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,084 yesterday to 2,105 today. It is unclear why three cases were subtracted from the total. The county also reported three more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the county total to 103.
There are 172 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 163 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 25,575 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 267 of those patients who have been tested.
April 26
1:00 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 48 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 2,040 yesterday to 2,084 today. It is unclear why four cases were subtracted from the total. The county also reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the county total to 100.
There are 163 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 165 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 24,580 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 275 of those patients who have been tested.
April 25
1:38 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 22 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 2,040. The county also reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the total in the county to 99.
There are 165 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 176 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 23,036 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 281 of those patients who have been tested.
April 24
1:24 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 35 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 1,978 yesterday to 2,018 today. It is unclear why three cases were subtracted from the total. The county also reported three more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the county total to 98.
There are 176 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 178 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
April 23
1:28 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 28 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 1,962 yesterday to 1,987 today. It is unclear why three cases were subtracted from the total. The county also reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the county total to 95.
There are 178 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 191 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 21,064 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 278 of those patients who have been tested.
April 22
4:31 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 19 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 1,946 yesterday to 1,962 today. It is unclear why three cases were subtracted from the total. The county also reported six more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the county total to 94.
There are 191 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 175 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 20,416 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 285 of those patients who have been tested.
9:07 a.m. PT Stanford asked on Monday that the U.S. Department of Education rescind the University’s application for “relief funds under the Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund section of the CARES act,” the University announced today, citing the “priority” that smaller colleges be funded.
“Since half of these funds were to be directly applied to grants for students, we want to reassure our students that we remain fully committed to the financial aid that has been promised to them,” the announcement states.
April 21
8:24 p.m. PT COVID-19 deaths on Feb. 6, Feb. 17 and March 6 were announced by Santa Clara County today. Previously, the first COVID-19 death in the county was believed to have occurred on March 9. The county expects to confirm more COVID-19 deaths as the medical examiner-coroner investigates.
2:57 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 27 new cases of COVID-19 today. The reported total has increased from 1,922 yesterday to 1,946 today. It is unclear why three cases were subtracted from the total. The county also reported five more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the county total to 88.
There are 175 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 189 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 19,928 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 275 of those patients who have been tested.
11:26 a.m. PT Stanford is aware of 39 people “who are connected to the Stanford community either as faculty, staff, students or postdocs and who have received positive COVID-19 test results,” the University noted in an update to its website on Monday. The total had been at 38 since April 13.
April 20
5:10 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 41 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,922. The county also reported six more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the total in the county to 83. Case counts “for the most recent five days will likely increase as the results are received,” the county wrote.
As of today, 19,463 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 250 of those patients who have been tested.
There are 189 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 200 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
April 19
10:12 p.m. PT There are 200 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 187 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
7:47 p.m. PT “Due to a data update in the Reportable Disease Information Exchange (CalREDIE), managed by the California Department of Public Health, the County of Santa Clara’s COVID-19 Cases dashboard will not be updated” today, for the second day in a row, the county wrote.
April 18
4:04 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 37 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,870. The county also reported four more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the total in the county to 73.
As of today, 17,774 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 244 of those patients who have been tested.
There are 187 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 188 on Wednesday, according to the county’s dashboard.
April 17
11:42 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 40 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,833. The county also reported four more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the total in the county to 69.
As of today, 17,061 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 220 of those patients who have been tested.
April 16
1:40 a.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 71 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday, bringing the total number in the county to 1,793. The county also reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the total in the county to 65.
Due to “system issues” on Wednesday, the county reported 71 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday, bringing the total number in the county to 1,793. The county also reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the total in the county to 65.
There were 188 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of Wednesday, according to the county’s dashboard.
April 14
5:04 p.m. PT Stanford is creating a grant program for “employees who are facing financial hardships – including those who work in certain contingent roles that are not eligible for pay continuation,” the University announced today amid criticism for not continuing subcontracted workers’ pay.
“We will be working with the [campus service workers] contract firms … so that, with Stanford resources and the resources offered by the government, these firms will be supported in maintaining income and benefits for these employees through June 15,” the University added.
“We’re committing to pay continuation for all regular Stanford employees (both full-time and part-time benefits-eligible employees) through June 15, the end of our spring quarter,” the University wrote.
“For the other category of employers who provide services at Stanford – vendors who rent space on campus in order to operate their businesses here – we will be reaching out to assist them,” the University added.
1:21 p.m. PT Stanford is aware of 38 people “who are connected to the Stanford community either as faculty, staff, students or postdocs and who have received positive COVID-19 test results,” the University noted in an update to its website on Monday. The total had been at 37 since April 9.
April 13
3:04 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported COVID-19 case numbers for the following cities in the county as of today: Campbell (29), Cupertino (19), Gilroy (28), Los Altos (18), Los Altos Hills (<10), Los Gatos (23), Milpitas (54), Monte Sereno (<10), Morgan Hill (30), Mountain View (34), Palo Alto (62), San Jose (1082), Santa Clara (72), Saratoga (<10), Sunnyvale (91) and “Other/Unknown” (104).
2:23 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 45 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,666. The county also reported six more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the total in the county to 60.
There are 197 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 194 as of Saturday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 15,529 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 193 of those patients who have been tested.
April 12
1:33 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 55 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,621. The county also reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the total in the county to 54.
As of today, 14,956 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 215 of those patients who have been tested.
April 11
4:33 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 82 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,566. The county also reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the total in the county to 51.
There are 194 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 185 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 14,589 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 224 of those patients who have been tested.
April 10
5:14 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 42 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,484. The county also reported three more deaths from COVID-19, bringing the total in the county to 50.
There are 185 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 285 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 14,135 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 251 of those patients who have been tested.
8:51 p.m. PT Stanford is aware of two more people who are “connected to the Stanford community either as faculty, staff, students or postdocs and who have received positive COVID-19 test results,” bringing the total to 37, the University noted in an update to its website on Thursday.
April 9
11:46 p.m. PT Santa Clara County began reporting the race/ethnicity breakdown of confirmed deaths by COVID-19 today. The county has not released data on the number of cases by race/ethnicity. See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area.
5:18 p.m. PT “Any internship in the summer of 2020 that is funded through the University has to be remote in nature,” wrote Department of Communication Student Services Manager Katrin Wheeler in an email today.
“We understand that this decision creates additional stress, but we hope you will all understand that safety is our top priority,” Wheeler wrote.
4:57 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported COVID-19 case numbers for the following (but not all) cities in the county as of today: Campbell (26), Cupertino (17), Gilroy (24), Los Gatos (21), Milpitas (43), Mountain View (30), Palo Alto (57), San Jose (958), Santa Clara (54) and Sunnyvale (65).
4:13 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 62 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,442. The county also reported one more death from COVID-19, bringing the total in the county to 47.
There are 285 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, compared to 278 yesterday, according to the county’s dashboard.
As of today, 13,360 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 251 of those patients who have been tested.
April 8
4:28 p.m. PT Santa Clara County issued an order today requiring “all entities and individuals in the County to disclose, on a one-time basis, any large inventories of personal protective equipment (PPE) and ventilators” via an online survey.
4:17 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 95 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,380.
The county also reported three more deaths from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 46.
11:35 a.m. PT “At this time, we are not aware of any students living on the Stanford campus who have an active confirmed case of COVID-19,” wrote Stanford in an update to its website on Tuesday. “A student whose case was previously reported on this page has recovered and completed self-isolation.”
April 7
5:07 p.m. PT “Just over 3,000” of Stanford’s nearly 7,000 undergrads “applied on deadline to remain on campus [for spring quarter], and just over 1,000 of those applications were approved,” wrote the vice provost for Student Affairs today, clarifying the results of March’s approval process.
In a call with Stanford program directors on March 25, the provost said that “only about 640” undergrads are currently on campus after receiving offers to stay on the condition that they follow University, county and state regulations related to combating the spread of COVID-19.
2:54 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 61 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,285.
The county also reported one more death from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 43.
April 6
5:36 p.m. PT There are 276 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, according to the county’s dashboard.
3:50 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 17 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,224.
The county also reported three more deaths from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 42.
12:15 p.m. PT “The 2020 ASSU elections will be conducted virtually in the Spring,” wrote ASSU Elections Commissioner Christian Giadolor ’21 in an email to The Daily. “The new campaigning period will be from May 11th – May 17th. The new voting period will be May 18th – May 19th and election results will be released to the student body on May 22nd.”
“We recognize that conducting virtual elections will be challenging and the Elections Commission is committed to ensuring that the electoral process is equitable and accessible as possible,” Giadolor added. “Campaign regulations are being drafted to reflect the new platform in which the elections are being conducted and will be communicated to the candidates once completed.”
April 5
4:19 p.m. PT As of today, 11,000 patients in Santa Clara County have been tested for COVID-19 since the start of the outbreak, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 211 of those patients who have been tested.
2:27 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 59 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,207.
The county reported zero deaths from COVID-19 today for the first time since March 29.
April 4
3:38 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 54 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,148.
The county also reported one more death from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 39.
April 3
4:11 p.m. PT In Santa Clara County, 9,910 patients have been tested for COVID-19 in total as of today, according to the county’s updated dashboards. The county is awaiting results for 207 of those patients who have been tested.
3:26 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 75 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,094.
The county also reported two more deaths from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 38. See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area.
There are 287 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of today, according to the county’s updated dashboard. The county also provided updated data on use of acute hospital beds, ICU beds, surge beds and ventilators.
12:51 a.m. PT There were 245 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in Santa Clara County as of April 2, according to the county’s updated dashboard. The county also provided data on use of acute hospital beds, ICU beds, surge beds and ventilators.
April 2
10:18 p.m. PT “All [Residential Education (ResEd)] plans for Autumn Quarter are on hold until further notice,” wrote ResEd head Cheryl Brown in an email to student staff tonight. “This includes student staff training, Pre-Assignment, the Housing Draw, and the In-House Draw.”
“We will notify all student staff who were appointed to positions starting in Autumn Quarter that we will not begin any training or communication about their roles until we have a better understanding of how this pandemic may impact their roles and responsibilities next year,” Brown continued. “We ask that you solely focus on your current residents until we have approval from university leadership to move forward with any plans for Autumn Quarter.”
6:40 p.m. PT “We will close all entrances to the Dish at 5 p.m. Friday, April 3,” wrote Associate Vice Provost for Environmental Health & Safety Russell Furr in an announcement this evening.
“Extensive signage and increased staff presence were intended to reinforce and educate Dish users to act responsibly in the interests of the entire community,” Furr wrote. “While many visitors have taken those measures to heart, unfortunately, there have been a persistent minority of individuals who have not complied with these rules and have, therefore, put others at risk.”
Additionally, “Stanford’s basketball, volleyball and tennis courts among other outdoor spaces will be closed” in light of the more stringent shelter-in-place order in Santa Clara County that took effect at 11:59 p.m. on March 31, Furr wrote. “The use of picnic tables and outdoor barbecues is also prohibited.”
6:03 p.m. PT The Undergraduate Senate is currently voting on a resolution calling for “pay continuance for all workers affiliated with Stanford University,” including subcontracted workers. The vote closes at 7 p.m. PT. Students can comment at stanford-assu.slack.com.
UPDATE 7:14 p.m. PT: The bill was approved by a 9-0 vote in the Slack workspace. Five of the 14 senators did not vote.
4:02 p.m. PT Stanford’s 2020 Sophomore College (SoCo) program “is suspended and will not happen,” wrote Stanford Introductory Studies Associate Director Dayo Mitchell in an email to a Daily staffer. “… In Sophomore College, residential living and experiential learning are the most important mechanisms through which students build community, confidence, and connections with faculty. Rather than go online, we have chosen to pause the program for a year. SoCo will resume in 2021.”
2:30 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 63 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 1,019.
The county also reported four more deaths from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 36. See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area.
1:25 p.m. PT Stanford President Marc Tessier-Lavigne and Provost Persis Drell “are taking a voluntary base pay reduction of 20% each,” and “are asking members of the Cabinet, the senior leadership of the university, to take voluntary base reductions of 5-10% each.”
The University is also “freezing faculty and staff salaries immediately. Increases will not be provided during the next year other than those required by a collective bargaining agreement, or those required in exceptional circumstances with the approval of a Dean, the Provost or the President.”
Many programs upon which graduate students rely as a source of income “will not go forward as planned,” Drell wrote. “We are asking all departments and programs to work with graduate students in this situation to explore alternate work opportunities and sources of support.”
“Many undergraduates who receive financial aid are expected to contribute summer earnings to their cost of attendance,” Drell added. “The summer earnings expectation will be waived for all new incoming students and continuing undergraduates for summer 2020.”
“Because we are seeking to minimize impacts to our regular workforce … we, unfortunately, are not able to extend additional commitments to others including workers who are employed by a contractor,” wrote Provost Persis Drell today as criticism persists.
The University is also “asking all units to re-evaluate their discretionary spending and pull back on all spending that is not critical to ongoing operations,” Drell wrote.
“All capital projects are on hold during the current “shelter in place’ with the exception of projects deemed essential by the county,” Drell wrote. “All other projects are being re-evaluated to determine whether and when they should proceed. No new capital projects will be approved at this time.”
1:17 p.m. PT Stanford’s summer quarter will be online only, and the University does “not expect to be able to offer on-campus residential programs this summer,” wrote Stanford Provost Persis Drell in an announcement today.
“Undergraduates who are currently approved to reside on campus for spring quarter will have the opportunity to request to remain for the summer if their circumstances require it,” Drell wrote.
10:42 a.m. PT Santa Clara County announced that there are 198 hospitalized COVID-19 patients in the county as of March 31. The county also provided data on use of acute hospital beds, ICU beds, surge beds and ventilators.
10:38 a.m. PT Santa Clara County released COVID-19 testing data showing that 8,246 patients have been tested in the county, with 956 positive results, 7138 negative results and 152 pending results as of April 1.
The county data also reveals that the average turnaround time — “between the data the specimen was collected and the date the results came back” — for COVID-19 testing results in the county is 2.52 days.
April 1
2:22 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 66 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 956.
The county also reported two more deaths from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 32. See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area.
March 31
7:49 p.m. PT “We strongly believe in the value and importance of celebrating in person, and we have committed to holding an on-campus Commencement celebration for 2020 graduates at some point in the future,” Stanford wrote in an update to its website. “The timing and format will depend on the evolution of the COVID-19 situation. We also plan to recognize and celebrate the accomplishments of our graduating students in June 2020, though we will have to do so at a distance.”
In a call with program directors on Wednesday, Stanford President Marc Tessier-Lavigne said, “We’ve deferred on-campus commencement to next year sometime. … We don’t know when. We don’t know what format.”
He added that a “working group” is communicating with the different schools at Stanford and the Associated Students of Stanford University to organize “something virtual in the near term and in person later.”
“We want students to be able to be there [at commencement],” Tessier-Lavigne said. “We want families to be able to be there. And we want to engage both graduates and undergraduates. … More to come on this in coming weeks probably.”
5:19 p.m. PT Stanford is aware of three more people who are “connected to the Stanford community either as faculty, staff, students or postdocs and who have received positive COVID-19 test results,” bringing the total to 35, the University noted in an update to its website this afternoon.
2:45 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 42 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 890.
The county also reported two more deaths from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 30. See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area, including cases’ reported causes and outcomes.
1:42 p.m. PT Santa Clara County released a new shelter-in-place order that takes effect today at 11:59 p.m. and “clarifies, strengthens, and extends certain terms” of the prior order until 11:59 p.m. on May 3. The previous order took effect on March 17 and was set to expire on April 7.
March 30
7:30 p.m. PT Stanford announced this evening that it is “asking individuals who have traveled outside the state of California and are now returning to Stanford to self-isolate for 14 days. This applies to anyone who plans to come to campus buildings or offices for any reason other than health care, and it also applies to anyone living in on-campus student housing.”
4:54 p.m. PT Stanford is aware of three more people who are “connected to the Stanford community either as faculty, staff, students or postdocs and who have received positive COVID-19 test results,” bringing the total to 32, the University noted in an update to its website this afternoon.
2:58 p.m. PT Santa Clara County Public Health wrote on its website that the “new confirmed cases reported today include some results that were not previously reported over the past two days. This increase reflects a reporting delay, not necessarily a significant single day increase.”
2:30 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 202 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 848. This is the largest single-day increase in reported cases in the county since the outbreak began. It more than doubles the previous record of 84, which was set on March 25.
The county also reported three more deaths from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 28. See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area, including cases’ reported causes and outcomes.
12:43 p.m. PT “The Public Health Order for people to shelter-in-place safely in their homes will soon be extended until at least May 1,” wrote Santa Clara County in a press release today. “… Additional details about the updated order will be available when it is finalized in the next day or two.”
The order is also effective in the City of Berkeley and the following counties: Alameda, Contra Costa, Marin, San Francisco and San Mateo.
March 29
1:33 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 55 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 646.
The county reported zero deaths from COVID-19 today for the first time since March 21. See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area, including cases’ reported causes and outcomes.
March 28
2:55 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 17 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 591.
The county also reported five more deaths from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 25. See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area, including cases’ reported causes and outcomes.
March 27
8:58 p.m. PT “Only student staff enrolled in Spring Quarter and seniors still living on campus who were approved for a post-graduation quarter are eligible to receive a [Spring Quarter residential student staff] stipend,” wrote Residential Education in an email to student staff this afternoon.
3:24 p.m. PT Stanford is aware of three more people who are “connected to the Stanford community either as faculty, staff, students or postdocs and who have received positive COVID-19 test results,” bringing the total to 29, the University noted in an update to its website today.
3:21 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 32 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 574.
The county also reported one more death from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 20. See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area, including cases’ reported causes and outcomes.
March 26
6:24 p.m. PT Stanford has instituted a pause on hiring for staff positions effective today and has asked deans to pause faculty searches, the University announced this evening.
For faculty: “If a search is in process and has not converged on a finalist, then the search should be paused temporarily, until more complete information about the university’s budget position is available. However, if a search has concluded and discussions have taken place with the finalist about terms of the offer, or if an offer has been extended, then the hiring process should proceed.”
For staff: “New requisitions will not be opened without the approval of a dean or vice president. All interviews in progress and pending offers should be put on hold temporarily.”
6:04 p.m. PT Other policy changes were unanimously approved by the Faculty Senate at today’s meeting. Changes are listed in The Daily’s Twitter thread here.
5:16 p.m. PT The Faculty Senate voted 36-15 today to mandate that all spring quarter courses be graded on a satisfactory/no-credit basis, with the exception of courses in the graduate schools of business, law and medicine. Two other options were proposed to the Senate and rejected.
2:51 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 83 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 542.
The county also reported two more deaths from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 19. See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area, including cases’ reported causes and outcomes.
12:15 p.m. PT The bill was approved by an 11-0 vote in the Slack workspace. Three of the 14 senators did not vote.
10:44 a.m. PT The Undergraduate Senate is currently voting via Slack on a bill to endorse a mandatory “A+/A/NC” grading scale for spring quarter and propose it to the Faculty Senate, which meets today at 2 p.m. PT. The vote closes at 12 p.m. PT. Students can comment at http://stanford-assu.slack.com.
March 25
11:11 p.m. PT “Only about 640” undergraduates are currently on campus, said Provost Persis Drell in a call with University program directors on Wednesday, after they received offers to stay on the condition that they follow University, county and state regulations related to combating the spread of coronavirus.
Residential student staff have reported that some of the students allowed to stay are not following Santa Clara County’s “shelter-in-place” guidelines, wrote Dean of Students Mona Hicks in an email to staff on Wednesday night. Some students are being reassigned to different dorms, she added.
9:27 p.m. PT Stanford is aware of two more people who are “connected to the Stanford community either as faculty, staff, students or postdocs and who have received positive COVID-19 test results,” bringing the total to 26, the University noted in an update to its website tonight.
6:08 p.m. PT “If you are returning from or transiting through the state of New York, you will be subject to a 14-day self-isolation period upon return,” the University announced Wednesday evening.
“Travelers returning to a campus residence must have an appropriate place to self-isolate on campus,” the announcement reads. “That means a studio apartment or an apartment in which there is a private bathroom or one shared only with travel companions.”
5:29 p.m. PT “A proposal to change the default grading basis for Spring Quarter to Satisfactory/No Credit instead of letter grades” will be discussed at tomorrow’s Faculty Senate meeting, according to an email sent by the Associated Students of Stanford University (ASSU) Executive Team today.
Students may provide feedback on the proposals listed in the email using this form until 9 a.m. PT tomorrow. To request access to tomorrow’s 2 p.m. PT Faculty Senate meeting over Zoom, members of the community can email Adrienne Emory ([email protected]).
2:20 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 84 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 459. This is the largest single-day increase in reported cases in the county since the outbreak began. It breaks the previous record of 67, which was set on March 21.
The county also reported another death from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 17. See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area, including cases’ reported causes and outcomes.
March 24
8:30 p.m. PT Stanford is “aware of 24 individuals, residing in a variety of communities in the Bay Area and beyond, who are connected to the Stanford community either as faculty, staff, students or postdocs” and who have tested positive for COVID-19. One of them is a student currently on campus.
6:48 p.m. PT Stanford is suspending all Bing Overseas Studies Program (BOSP) programs for summer quarter, the University announced this afternoon. According to the announcement, “348 undergraduates accepted or waitlisted to study abroad” will be affected.
“Affected BOSP summer quarter programs include Cape Town and Santiago, as well as BOSP overseas seminars scheduled to take place in Cambodia, Ghana, India, Israel, Japan, Mexico, Nepal, Russia, Singapore, South Africa, and Vietnam,” the announcement reads. “The decision also affects BOSP’s summer internship programs in France, Japan, and Germany.”
4:27 p.m. PT “Renters in Santa Clara County who cannot pay their landlords because of lost wages, layoffs and illness during the coronavirus crisis are getting a break after the Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors today unanimously approved a countywide eviction moratorium that takes effect immediately,” the county announced in a press release today.
3:21 p.m. PT The bill mentioned below was approved by an 8-0 vote in the Slack workspace. Six of the 14 senators did not vote.
1:21 p.m. PT The Undergraduate Senate is currently voting on a bill to transfer $30,000 allocated to a now-canceled spring event with Chanel Miller to the Associated Students of Stanford University (ASSU) Support Fund in the ASSU Slack workspace. Students can join at http://stanford-assu.slack.com.
Transferred money would be used “for the express purpose of purchasing food and transportation aid for students in need,” and remaining funds would be “transferred back to the Senate Programming Board Reserves,” according to the bill. Senators have until 3 p.m. PT today to vote.
11:50 a.m. PT Labs testing people for COVID-19 in Santa Clara County will now need to report negative and inconclusive results to the county, says an order issued by the county today. Previously, only positive test results had to be reported. Santa Clara was one of seven Bay Area counties to set such requirements today.
10:52 a.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 54 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 375. See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area, including cases’ reported causes and outcomes.
The county also reported three more deaths from COVID-19 this morning, bringing the total in the county to 16.
March 23
9:24 p.m. PT “While we know how many patients total are tested each day in our local public health laboratory, we do not know how many people in Santa Clara County, overall, are being tested in other labs,” the county wrote in an announcement tonight.
“Only positive test results are mandated to be reported to the County Public Health Department,” the county added.
5:28 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 19 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 321. See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area, including cases’ reported causes and outcomes.
The county also reported three more deaths from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 13.
12:11 p.m. PT “Stanford Medicine is preparing to extend outpatient COVID-19 testing to the Galvez [parking lot] location for patients with a Stanford physician order,” wrote Stanford Health Care spokesperson Julie Greicius in an email to The Daily. “Patients may call Stanford Express Care at (650) 498-9000 to schedule a video visit with a Stanford physician, who will evaluate and refer them for testing if needed. We will provide more information in the coming days as details are finalized.”
March 22
4:58 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 39 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 302. See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area, including cases’ reported causes and outcomes.
The county also reported two more deaths from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to 10. A woman in her 60s was the ninth to die, while a woman in her 40s was the 10th.
March 21
2:55 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 67 new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 263. This is the largest single-day increase in reported cases in the county since the outbreak began. It breaks the previous record of 24, which was set on March 16.
See The Daily’s updated visualizations of COVID-19 cases in the Bay Area, including cases’ reported causes and outcomes.
1:30 p.m. PT “The 2019-2020 ASSU Elections are Postponed until Further Notice,” wrote ASSU Elections Commissioner Christian Giadolor ’21 in an email to candidates. “We will be reassessing the situation in early April to determine whether virtual elections are an option later in Spring Quarter or if the elections will need to be postponed further.”
March 20
5:56 p.m. PT “I am convening a Recovery Team to think through how we will manage the aftermath of this crisis and get our campus back to a new normal,” wrote University President Marc Tessier-Lavigne in an announcement this evening.
Stanford “will not be able to hold our traditional Commencement ceremony in June,” Tessier-Lavigne wrote. This is a change from yesterday’s message from the provost, which said the University did “not expect” to hold the traditional ceremony.
2:06 p.m. PT Santa Clara County Public Health reported two more deaths from COVID-19 this afternoon, bringing the total in the county to eight. A man in his 80s was the seventh to die, while a man in his 70s was the eighth.
Santa Clara County also reported seven new cases of COVID-19 today, bringing the total number in the county to 196. See The Daily’s up-to-date visualizations of the number of COVID-19 cases in Santa Clara County, including cases’ reported causes and outcomes.
11:21 a.m. PT Stanford Health Care issued a call for COVID-19 testing supplies this morning.
March 19
California Gov. Gavin Newsom issued a statewide “shelter-in-place” order, subjecting all counties in the state to the policy previously implemented in Bay Area counties.
6:22 p.m. PT Spring classes will be taught online for the entire quarter, Provost Persis Drell announced this afternoon, adding that the University does “not expect to be able to hold this year’s Commencement in its traditional form.” The start of spring quarter will also be delayed from March 31 to April 6 for all schools except the Graduate School of Business, the School of Medicine and the School of Law, but the quarter will still end on June 11 as planned, Drell wrote. Instead of setting a week aside for traditional final exams, instructors will use “in-class quizzes and out-of-class assignments throughout the quarter to assess student performance” in recognition of the loss of the first week of instruction and “the difficulties with administering timed high-stakes exams to students in a wide range of time zones, and whose access to quiet exam-taking space varies widely.”
3:07 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 14 new cases of coronavirus today, bringing the total number in the county to 189. See The Daily’s up-to-date visualizations of the number of COVID-19 cases in Santa Clara County, including cases’ reported causes and outcomes.
March 18
9:12 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 20 new cases of coronavirus today, bringing the total number in the county to 175. See The Daily’s up-to-date visualizations of the number of COVID-19 cases in Santa Clara County, including cases’ reported causes and outcomes.
12:40 p.m. PT Stanford released a revised winter exam schedule today after deciding on Monday to postpone nearly all exams amid coronavirus concerns. The revised schedule does “not apply to courses taught within the Schools of Law and Medicine,” the announcement reads.
11:17 a.m. PT Santa Clara County Public Health reported another death from COVID-19 this morning, bringing the total in the county to six. The man was in his 60s, was hospitalized on March 5 and passed away on Tuesday.
March 17
4:28 p.m. PT Santa Clara County Public Health reported another death in the county, bringing the total to five. The man was in his 50s, was hospitalized on March 9 and passed away today.
3:19 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 17 new cases of coronavirus today, bringing the total number in the county to 155. See our updated visualizations.
3:16 p.m. PT The bill mentioned below was approved by a 10-0 vote in the Slack workspace. Four of the 14 senators did not vote.
12:51 p.m. PT The Undergraduate Senate is currently voting on a “Bill to Repurpose Appropriations Funding for COVID-19 Response” in the Associated Students of Stanford University (ASSU) Slack workspace. Students can join at http://stanford-assu.slack.com.
The vote will officially close at 2 p.m. PT, though eight of the 14 undergraduate senators have already voted in favor.
9:41 a.m. PT “You now need to stay away from your on-campus workspace, with rare exceptions to perform essential research functions,” wrote three Stanford administrators in an announcement addressed this morning to “Faculty, Staff, Postdocs and Students who Conduct Laboratory Research.”
Some exceptions were listed, including completion of “shutdown procedures” by Wednesday, “Conducting critical maintenance procedures that require regular attention from a person to maintain laboratory viability,” “Certain clinical research” and “COVID-19 research that has the potential to mitigate the spread of the pandemic.”
“Veterinary care will continue, as the health and welfare of research animals are essential,” the announcement adds.
March 16
8:52 p.m. PT “Until further notice, parking permits are not required to park in university-operated lots and garages,” Stanford announced today, citing an “anticipated increase in parking demand for hospital staff and patients” and a desire to support employees who cannot work remotely.
6:04 p.m. PT Santa Clara County Public Health announced two more deaths from COVID-19 today, bringing the total in the county to four. Both deaths occurred on Sunday. One was a man in his 80s who was hospitalized on March 7, and the other was a man in his 50s who was hospitalized on Thursday.
4:54 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 24 new cases of coronavirus today, bringing the total number in the county to 138. This is the largest single-day increase in reported cases in the county since the outbreak began. It breaks the previous record of 23, which was set on Sunday.
4:52 p.m. PT “There will not be tuition discounts for spring quarter,” wrote Provost Persis Drell in an announcement addressed to “Faculty, Instructors and Graduate Students” today. “… If a student feels that a spring quarter with online instruction will not meet their expectations, they have the option to take a leave of absence for spring quarter and re-enroll at a later date.”
3:46 p.m. PT “Effective immediately, we are requiring that remaining winter quarter final exams, as well as deadlines for all remaining final papers and projects, be delayed until further notice for all students, both graduate and undergraduate,” Stanford announced today.
3:38 p.m. PT Santa Clara County ordered its residents to “shelter in place” starting at 12:01 a.m. on Tuesday. The “shelter in place,” an order just below a lockdown, is used to urge residents to stay inside but does not forbid them from leaving their homes. It also urges residents to stay six feet away from others when leaving their residences. It is not clear how the order will be enforced. Stanford has announced that it will respond later today.
12:32 p.m. PT “Stanford wants to reassure employees that, at this time, the university intends to continue to pay all full-time and benefits-eligible part-time (“regular”) employees at their current base rate of pay without respect to the number of hours they work,” the University announced today.
March 15
2:32 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 23 new cases of coronavirus today, bringing the total number in the county to 114. This is the largest single-day increase in reported cases in the county since the outbreak began. It breaks the previous record of 18, which was set on Thursday.
March 14
7:17 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 12 new cases of coronavirus today, bringing the total number in the county to 91.
This update previously stated that Santa Clara County had reported 17 new cases of coronavirus. The Daily regrets this error.
3:32 p.m. PT The bill was approved by an 8-0 vote in the Slack workspace. Six of the 14 senators did not vote. See the bill here.
12:30 p.m. PT The Undergraduate Senate is accepting questions and comments on a “Bill to Provide Emergency Funding for COVID-19 Response” in the Associated Students of Stanford University (ASSU) Slack workspace. Students can join at stanford-assu.slack.com.
The Senate will be voting on the bill at 2 p.m. PT, according to Appropriations Chair Tim Vrakas ’21.
10:29 a.m. PT The United Kingdom and Ireland have been added to a U.S. travel ban that now bars travelers to the United States from 28 European countries, Vice President Mike Pence announced this morning. The 30-day ban took effect at midnight on Friday.
March 13
6:45 p.m. PT Starting Saturday, students on meal plans “will need to come to their own dining hall,” wrote University President Marc Tessier-Lavigne. “There, they will be given pre-filled to-go containers and bottled or canned drinks.” Students will be barred from eating in the dining halls.
6:27 p.m. PT An undergraduate at Stanford is self-isolating after the University learned today that they have tested positive for COVID-19, wrote University President Marc Tessier-Lavigne in a message to the community. This is the first confirmed case in a Stanford student.
“For spring break and spring quarter, we will only be able to provide on-campus undergraduate housing and dining for a very limited number of students – those who have no other option than to be here,” Tessier-Lavigne added. “We will be prioritizing international students who cannot go home; students who have known severe health or safety risks; and students who are homeless. We are also planning to allow a small number of our residential staff who do not meet the previous criteria to remain on campus.”‘
Tessier-Lavigne also asked undergraduates to “leave the campus as soon as possible but at the latest by Wednesday, March 18, at 5 p.m.”
6:19 p.m. PT All Stanford instructors must make their final exams in winter quarter optional for undergraduate students, according to an email they received from the University today. Stanford cannot “accommodate the number of undergraduate students we were hoping,” administrators wrote in the email.
The change comes in light of increased measures announced by Santa Clara County earlier today.
This update previously implied finals would be optional for all students. As of now, the requirement only applies for undergraduates. The Daily regrets this error.
3:56 p.m. PT Miller clarified to The Daily that her email to Stanford in New York program students was based on her interpretations of Santa Clara County’s announcement, not official University communications.
2:54 p.m. PT Santa Clara County’s Friday order — which bans gatherings of over 100 people and places new restrictions on gatherings of over 35 people — means that “Stanford will not be able to run its cafeterias,” according to an email from Stanford in New York Program Director Rosina Miller to students in the program’s winter 2020 cohort.
“This is changing drastically the number of students who may be able to get an exception to return to campus,” Miller wrote. “I don’t know what the criteria will be, but there will certainly only be a very small number of students permitted to stay on campus.”
2:17 p.m. PT In response to an order from Santa Clara County this morning enacting greater restrictions to slow the spread of coronavirus, “it is very likely that [Stanford] will need to make changes to [its] existing plans for undergraduates,” wrote Vice Provost for Student Affairs Susie Brubaker-Cole in an announcement to students this afternoon.
“We are giving careful consideration to these issues and will be in touch with you later today with additional information,” she added.
March 12
“Due to the rapid acceleration of the spread of COVID-19 in Europe and other parts of the world, Stanford has suspended ALL university-sponsored international travel,” the University announced Thursday evening.
In the same announcement, Stanford revealed that it “is now restricting the appointment of all new Visiting Student Researchers, Visiting Postdoctoral Scholars and Visiting Scholars until at least June 1, 2020.”
Furthermore, “Stanford is extending its previously announced restrictions on large-group events. Effective immediately through May 15, university units should cancel or postpone events they are hosting that involve more than 50 participants (reduced from the original 150-participant threshold).”
8:30 p.m. PT Stanford administrators discussed travel reimbursements, spring financial aid reductions and remote federal work-study with students in a call on Thursday, while also leaving open the prospect of students being asked to return to campus in spring quarter.
5:30 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported 18 new cases of coronavirus today, bringing the total number in the county to 66. This is the largest single-day increase in reported cases in the county since the outbreak began.
Stanford will not require instructors to cancel final exams, the University announced in an email this afternoon. Instructors may grade students based on their work to date, and students may “request late class withdrawals and/or changes to class grading basis to CR/NC,” the email adds.
3:29 p.m. PT Stanford Athletics activities including “all competitions, practices, camps, clinics, and in-person recruiting activities are suspended until further notice” due to the rapid spread of coronavirus, Stanford announced on Thursday. The winter and spring seasons have been canceled for all Cardinal teams.
2:34 p.m. PT “As of now, 1:37 p.m., we have no confirmed cases of students who have been tested positive with COVID[-19],” said Assistant Vice Provost for Residential Education Cheryl Brown in a town hall with Row student staff members this afternoon.
March 11
8:38 p.m. PT Travel to the United States from 26 European countries, excluding the United Kingdom, Ireland and some others, will be suspended for the next 30 days, beginning at midnight on Friday, President Donald Trump announced tonight.
This update previously indicated that travel had been barred from all European countries other than the United Kingdom. The Daily regrets this error.
6:34 p.m. PT “We now have another confirmed case in Stanford Medicine as well as one on the main campus,” wrote Russell Furr, associate vice provost for Environmental Health & Safety, in an email today. The first case was reported in a Stanford Medicine faculty member on Friday.
There have now been three cases confirmed among Stanford affiliates.
5:07 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported three new cases of coronavirus today, bringing the total number in the county to 48.
2:32 p.m. PT Stanford’s spring-quarter program at Hopkins Marine Station in Monterey, California, has been canceled, according to an email from Hopkins director Mark Denny.
“Due to the unique nature of the course [BIOHOPK 175H: ‘Marine Science and Conservation in a Changing World’], including in-person class and lab work, the program will not be offered spring quarter,” Denny wrote.
10:45 a.m. PT “All competitions hosted by Stanford Athletics will be closed to the public through May 15 or until further notice,” wrote Assistant Athletics Director Brian Risso in an email announcement.
Full refunds will be issued to those who have purchased tickets.
“If Stanford is allowed to serve as one of 16 host sites for the NCAA Women’s Basketball Championship first/second rounds (March 20-22) at Maples Pavilion, we would be limited to the updated 1,000 total as mandated by the County of Santa Clara Public Health Department,” Risso wrote. “Included in this 1,000 total would be the following: official travel party for each institution, pass list for each institution and all working staff, officials and credentialed media.”
9:53 a.m. PT The World Health Organization declared coronavirus a pandemic on Wednesday morning, according to The New York Times. There are more than 120,000 cases across over 100 countries, and more than 4,300 people have died.
March 10
8:30 p.m. PT “The Stanford in New York spring quarter will be suspended in response to the rapidly evolving COVID-19 situation,” wrote Bing Overseas Program Director Aron Rodrigue in a statement.
7:14 p.m. PT “Stanford in Washington [SIW] will be closed for the spring quarter,” wrote SIW director Adrienne Jamieson in a statement.
5 p.m. PT “Stanford will begin the spring quarter on time, but we will use virtual learning, rather than in-person classes, until further notice,” wrote University President Marc Tessier-Lavigne in an announcement today. Undergraduates will not be forced to evacuate campus.
2:54 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported two new cases of coronavirus today, bringing the total number in the county to 45.
1:54 p.m. PT Fraternity and Sorority Life (FSL) recruitment “will be postponed to Fall quarter,” according to an email sent to FSL leaders and alumni advisers by Amanda Rodriguez, assistant dean and director of FSL.
1:33 p.m. PT Stanford’s switch to online classes amid coronavirus concerns will not endanger international students’ F-1 visa status thanks to new accommodations announced in a message sent by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) on Monday.
International students need an F-1 visa to study as a full-time student in the United States. Typically, F-1 students can count only one online class toward a full course of study while still maintaining visa eligibility during each term, according to the DHS website.
But as universities move classes online in an effort to combat the spread of coronavirus, international students now taking online classes will not be at risk of losing their visa, according to the DHS Student and Exchange Visitor Program.
The Bechtel International Center told international students on Monday that the measure is a temporary accommodation “until this health crisis passes.”
11:55 a.m. PT Multiple academic advising directors told undergraduate students via email on Tuesday morning that it is “likely that classes will be online” in spring quarter, but “it is not certain as of yet.”
“I know that the University administration is currently evaluating what next quarter will look like, and there should be more specific guidance coming in the next few days,” wrote lead academic advising director Arik Lifschitz in an email to students.
11:36 a.m. PT The Santa Clara County Board of Supervisors voted unanimously to extend the local health emergency declaration for 30 days at a meeting Monday morning.
With the number of confirmed cases in Santa Clara County now at 43, 21 of which are caused by community transmission, public health director Sara Cody reiterated that the county was shifting focus from containment — tracing contacts from every known case — to mitigation, which involves broader public health measures meant to slow the spread of contagion.
But because novel coronavirus is a new disease, meaning that no one has immunity, the county will not be able to completely prevent infection, Cody said. She added that vulnerable populations like the elderly and the homeless are most at risk.
March 9
9:54 p.m. PT The University is extending the deadline to request late class withdrawals or changes in class grading basis to this Sunday at 5 p.m. PT, according to an email to undergraduates sent by Vice Provost for Undergraduate Education Harry Elam.
The exceptions will only be accepted if the instructor verifies that course requirements changed as a result of the University’s response to coronavirus; requests for changes to unit total will be rejected, Elam wrote.
Santa Clara County is banning all gatherings larger than 1,000 people, the county’s public health department announced today. The order goes into effect at midnight on Wednesday and will continue for three weeks.
The first coronavirus death in Santa Clara County occurred this morning, and the county announced six more confirmed cases of the virus, bringing the total to 43 cases within the county.
4:27 p.m. PT Instructors should prepare for the “possibility that instruction in the first few weeks of spring quarter may need to be delivered online,” according to an email sent on Sunday by Debra Satz, dean of the School of Humanities and Sciences.
“If you have never used Zoom for teaching, this may be a good time to try it out,” the email adds.
The message directs recipients to the Teach Anywhere website for information on teaching online.
The email comes amid little public information from Stanford on the status of spring quarter, leading to speculation and anxiety among students.
12:35 p.m. PT The Santa Clara County Public Health Department has announced the first coronavirus-related death in the county. The patient, who died at El Camino Hospital this morning, was a woman in her 60s who “had been hospitalized for several weeks” and was the third case of COVID-19 reported by the county.
The woman was also the first person to be diagnosed with COVID-19 in the county “without any known history of international travel or contact with a traveler or infected person, suggesting she contracted COVID-19 in our community,” the county statement reads. Her case was reported on Feb. 28.
12:06 p.m. PT Students are receiving a phishing email with the subject line “Urgent: Corona Vιrus,” in an apparent attempt to steal SUNet ID login information. If you received the email, clicked on the link and entered your information, we recommend that you reset your password immediately.
9:42 a.m. PT Stanford is ending in-person instruction at all Bing Overseas Studies Program (BOSP) centers outside of the United States, “effective end of day Monday,” according to an email sent by Estelle Halevi, director of Stanford’s program in Paris, to students participating in the program.
“BOSP will cover the cost of airline change fees and can provide additional financial support for high financial need students,” Halevi wrote.
“Please do therefore begin making arrangements to return home as soon as possible,” she added. “U.S. citizens and permanent residents domiciled in the United States are expected to return home and not come to campus since there are no on-campus accommodations currently available for them.”
Exceptions will be made for domestic students who are unable to return home at this time, according to a person familiar with the situation. Students are being asked to register their travel with Stanford.
“International students and foreign nationals can be accommodated on campus and in some cases depending upon where they are from will be encouraged to return to the U.S. and not home (i.e. students from China, South Korea, Italy, Iran),” Halevi wrote.
March 8
5:20 p.m. PT “At this time we are not aware of any test results that have come back positive for coronavirus among Stanford students, which is welcome news,” wrote Associate Vice Provost for Environmental Health & Safety Russell Furr in a statement to the community.
Furr noted that “other students also have been tested” in the time since Provost Persis Drell announced on Friday that two undergraduate students had been tested following possible exposure to the virus.
“Many more people are likely to be tested in the days and weeks ahead, as a result of either symptoms they are experiencing or concerns about a possible exposure,” Furr wrote. “The university will not be in a position to provide ongoing updates about the numbers of individuals in our community who are being tested. However, to the extent we are aware of confirmed cases of COVID-19 among members of our community, we will be in close communication with county public health officials on the appropriate response steps, and we will be working to keep our community informed.”
4:30 p.m. PT Stanford is “no longer asking student staff to stay on campus,” according to an email that Assistant Vice Provost for Residential Education Cheryl Brown sent to student staff members around 4:20 p.m.
“ResEd will work with professional staff to backfill student support due to the departure of student staff,” she wrote. “We will follow up with additional details tomorrow.”
Brown wrote that Stanford is “making these decisions because we believe (1) many students are leaving campus and the need for student staff support will decrease (2) we need to put a plan in place that does not rely fully on part-time student staff to provide student support during this challenging and ambiguous time.”
She asked that student staff who stay on campus continue performing their “usual duties.” Students will not be removed from staffing roles for leaving campus, she added.
1:28 p.m. PT Santa Clara County reported five new cases of coronavirus this afternoon, bringing the total number of cases in the county to 37. The county did not share additional information about the newly diagnosed cases, but it noted that they “are currently under investigation.”
March 7
10:20 p.m. PT An update on the two undergraduates who have been tested and entered self-isolation after possible coronavirus exposure is “unlikely” tonight, Student Affairs spokesperson Pat Harris told The Daily.
“There has been no confirmation of infection at this time, and test results are expected to take up to 24 hours,” wrote Provost Persis Drell in a statement to the community around 5 p.m. yesterday.
More than 24 hours later, there is no update on the results, though the University did send a message around 10 p.m. today encouraging students to take care in making travel plans.
Santa Clara County reported eight new cases of coronavirus this afternoon, bringing the total number of cases in the county to 32. The county did not share additional information about the newly diagnosed cases.
March 6
Provost Persis Drell announced Stanford is canceling all in-person class meetings for the rest of the quarter, and that any exams are to be taken remotely. The University is also suspending all spring quarter international programs, canceling Admit Weekend, restricting all University-sponsored international travel and “strongly encouraging” against events with over 150 people, leaving some students to reconsider travel and internship plans.
School of Medicine Dean Lloyd Minor announced that a faculty member in the medical school has tested positive for COVID-19, marking the first publicly confirmed coronavirus case in a Stanford affiliate. The individual has not been in the workplace since experiencing symptoms, and people who came into contact with them have been instructed to self-isolate. Two students are in self-isolation after possible coronavirus exposure. They have been tested, but the results have not yet been shared.
Voluntary student organizations (VSOs) have been instructed not to host gatherings of more than 150 people, and the University has barred VSOs from off-campus events, hosting minors on campus and both domestic and international travel.
The Santa Clara County Public Health Department confirmed four more coronavirus cases, bringing the total number in the county to 24.
March 5
Stanford Medicine confirmed it is treating “a few patients” who have tested positive for the virus.
Stanford Medicine spokesperson Julie Greicius declined to comment on how many patients were being cared for, nor did she comment on whether the patients are affiliated with Stanford, citing patient privacy laws.
Greicius also declined to specify whether the patients are being cared for at Stanford Hospital on campus. Stanford Medicine’s facilities also include its ValleyCare hospital in Pleasanton and various specialty clinics across the Bay Area.
Six new coronavirus cases were confirmed in Santa Clara County, bringing the total number in the county to 20. Seven of the 20 people with confirmed cases had no known travel or direct contact with other confirmed cases.
March 4
Stanford announced that it is restricting University-sponsored international travel, including canceling all spring overseas programs, and recommending postponement of events larger than 150 people.
The Stanford Medicine Clinical Virology Laboratory launched a new diagnostic test for detecting coronavirus. The new test, which can deliver results within 12 to 24 hours, will rapidly identify infected people and could help limit the spread of the virus.
The test is currently in use only on patients at Stanford Health Care and Stanford Children’s Health suspected of having the SARS-CoV-2 virus.
Director of the Stanford Asia Health Policy Program Karen Eggleston predicted that coronavirus would become a global pandemic at a talk sponsored by Bechtel International Center.
March 3
Stanford released a statement updating its guidelines on coronavirus, calling for cancellation or postponement of large events and encouraging use of phone or video conferencing for meetings. The University is “strongly encouraging” against events of more than 150 people until at least April 15.
Russell Furr, the vice provost for environmental health and safety, wrote that Stanford “has activated an emergency operations organization” to coordinate measures against the virus.
“No one traveling from China, South Korea, Italy, Iran or any other country with a CDC Level 3 travel health restriction is allowed to be present on campus unless they complete a 14-day self-isolation immediately upon arrival in the U.S.,” Furr wrote.
In addition, Furr announced that student dining halls will be open to serve only Stanford community members. The University will also conduct more frequent cleaning in common areas and encourage community members to take personal precautions by adhering to basic hygienic practices such as hand-washing.
A student petition, which was started on March 1 and called for greater University action in response to coronavirus, surpassed 1,500 signatures.
Feb. 28
Responding to CDC travel advisories, Stanford announced restrictions on travel to Italy and Iran, in addition to the existing restrictions on travel to China and South Korea.
A Santa Clara County woman was diagnosed with coronavirus without having traveled to areas with outbreaks or coming into known contact with any infected individuals, county officials announced.
She was the seventh person in the county to be diagnosed and the second person in the U.S. to be diagnosed without having any known exposure to the virus. The first was a woman in Solano County, California, diagnosed on Feb. 26.
Feb. 26
The Bing Overseas Study Program (BOSP) announced that it would decide whether to suspend spring quarter study abroad programs by no later than March 20.
Feb. 25
Stanford informed program participants that in-person instruction in Florence, Italy, originally set to end on March 13, would instead end on Feb. 26, and that the University would provide students with $500 to cover airline fees so they could leave no later than March 1.
The University also emailed students a list of spring break travel guidelines, adding South Korea to a list of restricted countries that already included China.
Vaden Health Center Director James Jacob recommended against travel to Hong Kong, Macau, Japan and Italy, writing that “it is possible that the 14-day self-isolation period may be extended to these locations.” Stanford continued to ask that those who have recently returned from China self-isolate for 14 days.
Feb. 21
The first person confirmed to have coronavirus in Santa Clara County has fully recovered, the county announced.
Feb. 3
The second case of coronavirus in Santa Clara County was confirmed.
Jan. 31
The CDC confirmed the first case of coronavirus in Santa Clara County.
Jan. 30
Stanford Environmental Health and Safety (EH&S) asked all Stanford community members who have returned from traveling to China within the past 14 days to “self-isolate,” regardless of whether they show symptoms of coronavirus.
Stanford is also restricting travel to China, as the U.S. State Department issued a “Level 4: Do Not Travel” warning, the highest possible travel advisory level.
“Requests for [travel] exceptions need to be fielded by a vice president, vice provost, or dean and then forwarded to the Provost’s Office,” according to Russell Furr, associate vice provost for environmental health and safety.
Jan. 24
Stanford Environmental Health and Safety (EH&S) published the alert thread that the University has since been updating regarding coronavirus.
Jan. 8
The CDC issued an alert about the coronavirus outbreak in Wuhan, China.
“As soon as the CDC sent an alert about the outbreak, Stanford Health Care’s Emerging Infectious Diseases subcommittee was activated,” according to the Stanford Health Care website. “The subcommittee, along with the Stanford Health Care Infection Prevention & Control Department, relies on information from the CDC, World Health Organization, State and local County Public Health Departments to maintain the most current information and recommendations. They also provide guidelines for screening of patients and procedures for healthcare workers to follow should a patient require isolation, and to ensure patient and healthcare worker safety.”