After donating their supply of masks, they started reaching out to other contractors to help them donate their supplies.

Since they started mobilizing, they’ve been able to send supplies to nurses, doctors and police officers all across the country.

85-year-old man comforts wife with Alzheimer’s from window

Despite the coronavirus lockdown, Robert Barber, 85, found a way to visit his wife, Lauren, 80, at a memory care center in Albany, New York.

Every single day since the memory care center started implementing visitor restrictions, Robert has visited Lauren, who has dementia, from her window at the facility.

Video: This woman with Alzheimer's was comforted by her husband in the sweetest way

Their granddaughter, Alicia, posted their sweet interaction in a TikTok video, which has since gone viral.

The couple is seen exchanging \"I love yous,\" and Lauren sobs as Robert explains to her that they can’t be together because of the coronavirus.

They’ve been married for more than 60 years.

New Yorkers cheer for medical heroes

For the past few days on social media, New Yorkers have been sharing videos taken from their windows and rooftops of people all across the city celebrating essential workers as a way of saying thank you.

New Yorkers cheer their heroes: the nurses, doctors, hospital staff, et al. Thank you!!! pic.twitter.com/oWAD26I9fp

— Patrick Rizzo (@prizzotweet) March 27, 2020

At 7 p.m. each day, New York residents across the five boroughs fill the empty streets with the sound of applause and cheers to thank doctors, nurses, police, grocery and restaurant staffers, delivery people, and other essential workers fighting on the front lines of the coronavirus crisis.

While New York has become the center of the coronavirus pandemic in the United States, Gov. Andrew Cuomo continued to remind New Yorkers of their strength on Sunday.

\"We have made it through far greater things. We are going to be OK,\" he said. \"We are strong. We have endurance, and we have stability. We know what we are doing.\"

For the past few nights, New Yorkers have been celebrating healthcare and essential workers that are keeping the city going, with a cheer at 7:00 pm. Tonight's edition on an overcast evening on the Upper East Side. pic.twitter.com/lJsziGlCxw

— Bradley Kane (@WinoBradNY) March 29, 2020

Messages of encouragement left for hospital workers in sidewalk chalk

With many health care workers on the front lines of the coronavirus crisis, a medical center in New Jersey lifted the spirits of those helping patients with sweet messages of encouragement.

At Morristown Memorial Hospital, health care workers were surprised with several messages on the pavement in front of the medical center’s entrance doors.

View this post on Instagram

GIVING THANKS: Morristown Medical Center in New Jersey leaves messages of encouragement for the staff on the frontlines of the COVID-19 battle. #morristownmedicalcenter #newjersey #covid19 #coronavirus #medicalcare

A post shared by ABC News (@abcnews) on Mar 28, 2020 at 9:19am PDT

For staff starting their shifts, one message read, \"If you are just arriving, thank you for what you are about to do!\"

And for staff leaving the hospital, another message read, \"If you are leaving, thank you for what you did.\"

Senior citizens light up the night to thank medical workers

Senior citizens living in an Orlando high rise thanked medical staff caring for patients at Orlando Health by flashing their lights on and off in their apartments.

At 9 p.m. on Friday, lights flickered from residents’ apartments at Westminster Towers to show their appreciation for health care workers at Orlando Regional Medical Center who are on the front lines of the coronavirus crisis.

Since the south side of the building faces the medical facility, health care workers were able to see the light show, which was captured on video by workers at Orlando Health.

California teen organizes #TikTokProm

When San Ramon Valley High School in Danville, California, canceled its prom due to concerns over the coronavirus, student Natalie Reese, 17, didn’t want her prom dress to go to waste.

So, she got dolled up in her pink prom dress and surprised her family in their living room. Reese documented the moment of getting ready for \"prom\" in a video that went viral on #TikTok and included a snippet of her and her father sharing a dance.

@nataliereesie

Prom March 28! Share this with ur friends and have let’s have a magical prom! ##fyp ##tiktokprom ##coronavirus

♬ waves dean lewis - mikaylabahry

But Reese didn’t want prom to end there -- she and wanted to keep prom alive in an even bigger way with a virtual prom that anybody could take part in, with the hashtag #TikTokProm.

The online party was held on March 28 -- the same date that her high school prom was supposed to happen -- and her entire family took part in the affair.

@nataliereesie

What’s your prom walk? ##foryoupage ##tiktokprom ##fyp

♬ Don't Go Breaking My Heart - Party All Night
@nataliereesie

My family at prom! ##tiktokprom ##foryoupage ##fyp

♬ Something New feat. Ty Dolla $ign - Wiz Khalifa

5-year-old gives her take on how to stay calm during the coronavirus shutdown

A little girl is uplifting the internet with calming words amid the novel coronavirus crisis.

Taytum Bauman recently recorded a video for her pretend YouTube channel, speaking to her young \"followers\" about how to handle the pandemic.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Good Morning America (@goodmorningamerica) on Mar 28, 2020 at 9:00am PDT

\"I know you're very scared but it's OK,\" Taytum, 5, can be heard saying in the footage.

\"Take deep breaths ... just stay away from your grandparents because if you give it to them, it's going to make them really sick. You have to be really calm, OK?\" she said.

Mom Rachelle Ellis shared the video on Facebook, where it was viewed more than 18,000 times.

\"I did not expect it, many people were sharing,\" Ellis of Beverly, Ohio, told \"Good Morning America.\"

\"She knows the situation is real and serious ... but [in the video], she still kind of makes you laugh too.\"

Mystery mom leaves free lunches out every day 'for anyone who needs it'

In Severna Park, Maryland, a mystery resident has left bagged lunches outside a busy roundabout for \"anyone who needs it\" every day at 11 a.m.

A sign left with the bagged meal reads: \"For anyone who needs it: I will be leaving some healthy sack lunches on this table for you if you are hungry and need to eat. Made with love by a neighborhood mom in a clean and sanitized kitchen. I will leave this table up from 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m.\"

\"PHOTO:
Nic Kipke
PHOTO: In Severna Park, Maryland, a mystery resident has been leaving bagged lunches outside a busy roundabout for "anyone who needs it" every day at 11 a.m.
>

Kimberly Gussow, a local parent, said she grabbed a bag for her 7-year-old son and found inside a ham sandwich, fruit snacks, an orange and an apple.

\"This makes me embrace my community even more. I'm proud to live here,\" Gussow said. \"It’s great to show our kids that there is good in our world. It’s not just about ourselves, it needs to be about others too.\"

7-year-old surprised with birthday parade outside of her home

A Maryland family didn't let social distancing get in the way of celebrating their daughter’s birthday over the weekend.

Scraping plans for a big birthday bash with friends and family, Piper Franklin's friends and teammates decorated their parents' cars with balloons, signs and streamers, and drove by her home singing happy birthday and waving and honking.

\"It was really special,\" her mom Amand Hunt Franklin said. \"She had no idea and was so happy when she saw our friends screaming and honking.\"

Read the full story here.

Families raise thousands for school janitors on cleaning sprees amid COVID-19 crisis

While schools are closed across the country, custodial staff are doing their part to help stop the spread of the novel coronavirus with deep cleanings lasting several days.

To show their gratitude, parents have been raising thousands to pay these janitors overtime.

Brooke Thomas, a mom of four from Williston, Vermont, said her kids' schools shut down after a staff member was potentially exposed to coronavirus.

\"They're in a potentially contaminated area, making sure the school is safe for our kids,\" Thomas said.

\"PHOTO:
Lyall Smith
PHOTO: Lyall Smith (left) and John Baggs (right), both custodians at Williston schools in Williston, Vermont, have been cleaning and sanitizing doorknobs, carpets, floors, lockers and cubbies amid the novel coronavirus outbreak.
>

For precautionary measures, janitors did a two-day, thorough cleaning of both Allen Brook School and Williston Central.

Thomas chimed in on her local Facebook group, commenting on the hard work these men and women show in the schools. She then launched a Facebook fundraiser hoping to raise $200.

After four days the amount reached $7,450, which was split among eight custodians.

Lyall Smith, head of facilities and management at Williston schools, told \"GMA\" his staff is extremely thankful.

\"All my people were really thrilled that they took the time to thank us for what we're up to,\" Smith said, adding that he and his colleagues have been cleaning and sanitizing doorknobs, carpets, floors, lockers and cubbies.

Couple gets a special 50th wedding anniversary surprise amid coronavirus

Video: This couple got a special coronavirus style 50th wedding anniversary

Dan and Janice Kauffman’s 50th wedding anniversary dinner may have been postponed due to the coronavirus outbreak, but that didn’t stop their family from finding a way to celebrate.

The Ohio couple’s family showed up on their front lawn to send them their love. Watch the full moment above.

Their son-in-law Chuck Simpson told \"GMA\" that Janice and Dan are outstanding parents, and grandparents.

Happy anniversary to these two lovebirds!

Student acapella groups' conference call performances are pitch perfect

With the coronavirus putting a pause on many school activities, school choirs all over the country are relying on technology to stay in sync.

In California, choir members from Chino Valley Unified School District sang a snippet of an acapella version of \"Somewhere Over the Rainbow\" on video, and the school district’s director of communications, Imee Perius, edited it all together.

Video: High school choir stays connected by singing 'Somewhere Over the Rainbow'

Two other groups followed suit, including students from the Berklee College of Music and Boston Conservatory, who formed a 74-member virtual orchestra to perform a remake of Burt Bacharach's 1960s classic song \"What the World Needs Now is Love.\"

Video: College students perform virtual concert amid coronavirus

An acapella group from Vanderbilt University, the Melodores, shared footage of themselves harmonizing to Justin Timberlake’s \"Pusher Love Girl.\" \"We can still create and connect online,\" said Melodores member Jacob Friedman. \"It’s remarkable and I’m forever grateful for it.\"

Video: You will def catch goosebumps from this acapella group's virtual concert

Dog brightens day of seniors living under quarantine

Tonka the Great Dane is spreading joy at the Cedar Pointe Health and Wellness Suites in Texas.

\"PHOTO:
Courtesy Courtney Leigh
PHOTO: Courtney Leigh takes her Great Dane Tonka to visit residents of Cedar Pointe Health & Wellness Suites on March 17, 2020, in Cedar Pointe, Texas.
>

His owner, Courtney Leigh, stood outside the windows with the pooch waiting for the residents to see. Then, they’d walk over and say hello to through the windows, as the facility is under quarantine amid coronavirus.

\"They were smiling from ear to ear. Some reached out to touch the window,\" Leigh told ABC News. \"Of all the therapy visits, probably the most meaningful was this window visit. It seemed much more special with what's going on right now.\"

Read the full story here.

Kids spread love with rainbow art scavenger hunts

With many schools across the nation closed due to social distancing measures, kids are getting crafty with their time indoors.

The Facebook page \"Rainbows over Nassau and Suffolk Counties and Beyond\" has 27,000 members and counting, with families hoping to extend joy around several communities.

\"PHOTO:
Allyson Uttendorfer
PHOTO: Violet, 4, sits in front of her Long Island home beside a rainbow flower created to spread hope amid the coronavirus crisis.
>

Katherine Schilling, Nicole Sapienza and Danielle Arcuri, all of whom are from Long Island, New York, launched the group after seeing people hanging rainbow art in Italy amid the pandemic.

The idea is to hang handmade rainbow art in a place where other children can point them out while getting fresh air.

\"PHOTO:
Liz DeSimone Savitsly
PHOTO: Nicole Savitsky, 12 and her mom, Liz DeSimone Savitsly, are getting crafty during their time indoors as the coronavirus pandemic affects the globe.
>

\"Some are saying it's the rainbow at the end of the storm,\" Sapienza, a mom of three, told \"Good Morning America.\"

Schilling, mom to John, 16, and Sarah, 13, said the goal is to encourage more projects to keep children busy and hunting.

Read the full story here.

Free little library turns into free food pantry where neighbors leave essentials

Ashley Hamer of Chicago shared how her neighborhood is supporting due to coronavirus, converting their local shared library for free swaps into a little free pantry.

Seen in my Chicago neighborhood.

Sign says \"To help our neighbors affected by the COVID-19 crisis, this Little Free Library is converted to a Little Free Pantry. Take what you need and if you can, please donate what you can spare!\" pic.twitter.com/HtrUHNv9BG

— Ashley Hamer (@smashleyhamer) March 18, 2020

From toilet paper to canned goods, neighbors are leaving basics for those in need.

\"To help our neighbors affected by the COVID-19 crisis, this Little Free Library is converted to a Little Free Pantry,\" the sign reads. \"Take what you need and if you can, please donate what you can spare!\"

Watch the full story here.

'Everything Will Be OK' signs spread cheer in Georgia town

With art galleries closed in Dunwoody, Georgia, due to the coronavirus, residents are supporting their local artists with a simple message: \"Everything Will Be OK.\"

The message, which was originally coined in a 2009 mural by local artist Jason Kofke, has been spread through signs on lawns and windows, each sold for $20 to support local artists out of a job.

\"PHOTO:
Spruill Center for the Arts
PHOTO: 'Everything Will Be OK' signs pop up to spread cheer around a Georgia town.
>

Dunwoody resident Alan Mothner, who is also the CEO of the Spruill Center for the Arts, thought of the idea along with Heyward Wescott, who owns a local graphic design company.

\"It’s kind of known as the unofficial motto of the city of Dunwoody,\" said Mothner.

Since Sunday, they’ve received more than 600 orders for signs and have raised at least $14,500 for local artists in just 24 hours, Mothner said.

Read the full story here.

Family surprises 92-year-old grandfather with birthday parade

Alfred Vecoli’s family usually celebrates his birthday with big family get-togethers, but this year, due to the coronavirus, they had to ditch his 92nd birthday party celebration and instead opted for a parade.

Vecoli’s family and friends decorated their cars with balloons and banners and drove them up and down Vecoli’s street Sunday, honking and waving.

\"PHOTO:
WLNE
PHOTO: Alfred Vecoli of Pawtucket, R.I., is treated to a parade of cars filled with family members in honor of his 92nd birthday, March 22, 2020.
>

Then everyone left their cars and sang \"Happy Birthday\" outside Vecoli’s home, from a safe distance.

\"He’s the link to our family and we all do this for him,\" said Marianna Salois, Vecoli’s 13-year-old great-granddaughter.

Read the full story here.

Kindergarten teacher visits each of her students amid coronavirus

When school temporarily closed due to concerns over the coronavirus, one kindergarten teacher wanted to make sure her students were coping from the sudden change away from the classroom.

Like many instructors, Jean Witt, a kindergarten teacher at Aspen Creek school in Broomfield, Colorado, worried about her young students. So, she gathered some supplies like books and crayons from her classrooms and delivered them to each of her students.

\"I wanted to see my precious students and tell them how much I love them,\" she said.

\"VIDEO:
ABCNews.com
VIDEO: This kindergarten teacher drops off supplies and a little bit of love as well
>

While she said learning will continue online, Witt said she misses her classroom and the little voices that fill it.

\"They need a classroom community and their daily school routine. Suddenly losing a teacher is a loss,\" Witt said.

Read the full story here.

300 laptops donated to community college students in Los Angeles

Thanks to the Los Angeles Community College District, hundreds of students now have laptops they can use while they continue their studies remotely.

#CoronaKindness #LACCD giving first 300 laptops to students pre-registered ONLY 3/22 Trustees @mikeinla7 & @davidvela75 helping @LACityCollege @LATTC @LASCCampus @EastLACollege @PierceCollegeCA @CAgovernor @CalCommColleges @LAValleyCollege @andra_hoffman @gabriel_buelna pic.twitter.com/EqsQkTtycL

— LA Comm College Dist (@laccd) March 22, 2020

On Sunday, LACCD distributed 300 laptops to students who pre-registered for them online. Students were able to drive to the pickup location and stay in their vehicles while volunteers from the LACCD Board of Trustees delivered a laptop to their cars.

According to their website, LACCD hopes to make additional distributions soon in their efforts to help students learn at home.

Over 100,000 join DJ for virtual dance party on Instagram live

With so many Americans social distancing at home, DJ D-Nice, who has nearly 700,000 Instagram followers, hosted a virtual party as he spun music from his home Friday and Saturday nights.

Dubbed \"#ClubQuarantine,\" the virtual livestreams on Instagram live attracted more than 100,000 users who were all collectively listening to music and dancing in their homes.

Tons of celebrities tuned in too, including Oprah, Michelle Obama, Drake, America Ferrara, Janet Jackson, Justin Timberlake, Lenny Kravitz, Will Smith and Kim Kardashian.

Oprah tweeted, \"Best party of 1 and 100k I ever been to! Thanks @djdnice #ClubQuarantine.\"

Best party of 1 and 100k I ever been to! Thanks @djdnice #ClubQuarantine

— Oprah Winfrey (@Oprah) March 22, 2020

Filmmaker Ava Duvernay added: \"Thank you for tonight's party, truly epic, you brought so many together while save at home.\"

Incredible. Thank you for tonight’s party, @djdnice. Truly epic. You brought so many together while #SafeAtHome. Bravo! #ClubQuarantine pic.twitter.com/7a7i6Uq0U2

— Ava DuVernay (@ava) March 22, 2020

Virtual tip jars helping workers in one of hardest-hit industries

\"Virtual tip jars\" are popping up to provide financial support for service workers who have been economically devastated as bars and restaurant shutter.

As of Tuesday, March 17, all restaurants and bars in the city of Phoenix are closed to the public.

In that spirit, we've started a fund for all the bartenders who are not getting tips right now.

Thanks @jwolf722, @royherreraphx @ClueHeywood for joininghttps://t.co/y7lOIRQjAk

— Niles Parker Harris (@NilesHarris) March 20, 2020

Sam Schutte, an entrepreneur and the CEO of Unstoppable Software, created a virtual tip jar to pay the people whose restaurants and bars he frequented.

He said his virtual tip jar is a low-tech online spreadsheet, containing service workers' names and where they were employed along with their PayPal or Venmo information so you can directly pay them.

\"It just breaks my heart to see all these hardworking people that we depend on to take care of us and provide quality service and now they're facing this apocalypse,\" Schutte told ABC News.

As of Tuesday, March 17, all restaurants and bars in the city of Phoenix are closed to the public.

In that spirit, we've started a fund for all the bartenders who are not getting tips right now.

Thanks @jwolf722, @royherreraphx @ClueHeywood for joininghttps://t.co/y7lOIRQjAk

— Niles Parker Harris (@NilesHarris) March 20, 2020

\"If people want to still support them and thank them for the service they've provided it's a way to connect the dots – otherwise how can you find someone else's Venmo information? Venmo and PayPal are also pretty secure.\"

Bride and florist donate flowers after postponing wedding due to COVID-19

When a bride's big day was canceled because of coronavirus concerns, she and her florist teamed up to create a silver lining..

Keali Lay, 28, and her fiancé Jeff Scheider, 31, were set to marry March 21 in Bluffton, South Carolina.

The cake, flowers and DJ were ready to go, but after President Donald Trump encouraged no gatherings larger than 10 people, the venue cancelled the ceremony.

Lay called her vendors including her florist, Angela Mandigo, to inform her the wedding would be postponed.

\"PHOTO:
Courtesy Keali Lay | Angela Mandigo
PHOTO: Keali Lay and Jeff Scheider donated their wedding flowers after their ceremony was canceled due to coronavirus.
>

Mandigo suggested that Lay donate the flowers to people in the community who may need cheering up.

The flowers were given to several different people including a woman who wanted to uplift the spirits of the people in her office who were working throughout the coronavirus concerns.

\"It makes me feel a little better that this horrible thing has happened, [but] that something happy is coming out of it,\" Lay said.

Read the full story here.

Yale student leads 2,700 making prescription and grocery runs amid COVID-19 crisis

Family friends Liam Elkind, 20, a junior at Yale University and Simone Policano, 25, an actor, producer and Yale graduate, have come together in their city of New York, braving pharmacies and grocery stores to the old and at-risk.

In just days, their new organization, Invisible Hands Deliver, has 2,700 volunteers.

\"PHOTO:
Liam Elkind
PHOTO: Liam Elkind, 20, delivers medication to a woman. He started the organization, Invisible Hands Deliver, which has 2,700 volunteers.
>

\"In this time where we are stuck in our homes, it's amazing to see young people wanting to help,\" Policano told \"Good Morning America.\"

Elkind and Policano launched a website where people can request medicine, food and supplies that will be shopped for and dropped off for free.

\"PHOTO:
Wyatt Hill
PHOTO: Family friends Liam Elkind, 20, and Simone Policano, 25, have come together in their city of New York, braving pharmacies and grocery stores to the old and at-risk. Their organization, Invisible Hands Deliver, has 2,700 volunteers.
>

Volunteers are asked to follow several safety guidelines including CDC-approved safety precautions.

Wyatt Hill, 18, a New York resident, has volunteered to deliver groceries, medication and flowers.

\"I delivered to a woman yesterday, and it was her birthday. Just the smile on her face when I arrived made my day,\" Hill told \"GMA.\"

Gov. Cuomo in touch with Christian Siriano to sew masks

With a severe shortage of masks, fashion designer Christian Siriano is offering his services to those on the front lines of the coronavirus outbreak.

\"If we need masks my team can make them!\" Siriano wrote on Instagram, adding that he tweeted New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo with the idea. \"I have sewers and pattern makers ready to help working from home we just need all the information on how to help.\"

\"PHOTO:
Sean Zanni/Patrick McMullan via Getty Image
PHOTO: Christian Siriano at Gotham Hall on June 25, 2019 in New York City.
>

Cuomo tweeted Friday that he's in touch with Siriano about the handmade masks.

\"Appreciate his help so much,\" Cuomo wrote. \"Who's next? Let's do this together, NY!\"

The federal government has said up to a billion protective masks might be needed over the next six months.

Like Siriano, volunteers are offering a solution to the staff at Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital in Albany, Georgia, by sewing handmade, washable masks which help protect healthcare workers from contracting infectious diseases.

Couple leaves $9,400 tip at restaurant to help staff during COVID-19

Staff at a Houston restaurant received a massive $9,400 tip from a pair of customers hoping to do their part amid the coronavirus crisis.

The couple, who wish to remain anonymous, stopped by Irma’s Southwest restaurant March 16 after hearing all dine-in service across the county would be closed until further notice.

\"PHOTO:
Courtesy Irmas Southwest Restaurant
PHOTO: An anonymous couple left a $9,400 tip at Irma's Southwest Restaurant to help staff during coronavirus.
>

After their meal, the generous tipsters signed their check with a note to \"hold tip to pay your guys over the next few weeks.\"

\"Our staff was truly amazed and in awe of the gesture,\" said Louis Galvin, owner of Irma’s Southwest. \"It was so unexpected and I know it will be a big help for our employees.\"

The costumers left $1,900 in cash and an additional $7,500 on a credit card. The bill for their meal was $90.12.

Galvin said the $9,400 hull will be split evenly among his 30 employees which amounts to a roughly $300 pay day for each person.

Teacher writes 100 letters to students after school closes for the year

A middle school teacher found a way to let her students know that even though she won’t be seeing them every day in class, she is thinking about them.

Victoria Bay, 29, teaches sixth grade Social Studies at Andover Central Middle School in Andover, Kansas. This week, the school district made the call to close for the remainder of the school year due to coronavirus concerns.

\"PHOTO:
Courtesy Victoria Bay
PHOTO: Teacher Victoria Bay wrote 100 letters to her students after their school year came to an end.
>

When Bay realized she wouldn’t be giving her students proper goodbyes, she wanted to do something special.

She typed a generic letter for all 100 students and added a handwritten, personalized note to each. She sent them two days after news broke that the school year was over.

\"I wanted them to know that I instantly thought of them in that moment that [school] was canceled and I’m so thankful for the memories that we created together,\" Bay said.

4-year-old wished happy birthday during car parade

A little boy named Isaac got a cute surprise in California on Thursday as he and his family stood outside to watch a parade of residents and even staff from the elementary school drive by to share a happy \"hello\" with cooped-up neighbors during the pandemic.

Families and the principal at Valencia Valley Elementary School -- calling themselves \"the Quarantined Cruisers\" -- had organized the car parade to spread some joy in the community.

When they drove by Isaac's home, however, some of them -- and their children -- yelled out \"happy birthday\" to Isaac. According to Isaac's mother, Tammy, some of the families knew that this coming Sunday would be his fifth birthday and that his party had been canceled.

\"PHOTO:
Tammy
PHOTO: birthday boy gets car parade amid pandemic
>

\"What's happening? They're having a parade!\" she can be heard saying to her children, including Isaac. \"Look! Isn't that so cool?\"

In cars decorated with signs and balloons, the cars all drove by Isaac's home, honking and cheering loudly, as he stood and waved.

\"Happy birthday Isaac!\" one girl could be heard yelling out as her family's car drove by.

Grandma gets 95th birthday surprise from safe distance

A 95-year-old received a surprise birthday visit from family during the global coronavirus crisis.

On March 18, Kathleen \"Katie\" Byrne of Syracuse, New York, was greeted at a safe distance by loved ones singing \"Happy Birthday.\"

Her granddaughter, Sara Byrne shared video of the moment on Instagram where it was viewed by thousands.

\"We were just giving her well wishes, letting her know we were thinking about her,\" Sara told \"GMA.\"

\"PHOTO:
Sara Byrne
PHOTO: On March 18, Kathleen "Katie" Byrne of Syracuse, New York, was greeted at a safe distance by loved ones singing "Happy Birthday" during the coronavirus crisis.
>

Video: Family surprises grandma on 95th birthday amid COVID-19 pandemic

Katie Byrne has seven sons, 22 grandchildren and 29 great-grandchildren. Her 95th birthday party was canceled due to the COVID-19 crisis and has been keeping a safe distance from others.

Health officials and several states have recommended older adults stay home as the outbreak continues.

Garbage man does route in middle of the night to help city run

While the coronavirus has shut down the entire city of San Francisco, one sanitation worker said there’s no reason to be down in the dumps.

Aaron Meier, who starts his route early every morning, took to Twitter last week to share his message of hope to everyone and how important his job is to provide basic services to help fight the spread of the disease.

\"I am feeling an extra sense of pride and purpose as I do my work,\" he wrote. \"It’s gonna be ok … we’ll get through this.\"

Right now though, right now I am feeling an extra sense of pride and purpose as I do my work. I see the people, my people, of my city, peeking out their windows at me. They’re scared, we’re scared. Scared but resilient.
2/3

— Jester D (@JustMeTurtle) March 14, 2020

Us garbagemen are gonna keep collecting the garbage, doctors and nurses are gonna keep doctoring and nurse-ering. It’s gonna be ok, we’re gonna make it be ok. I love my city. I love my country. I love my planet Earth. Be good to each other and we’ll get through this. 💕

— Jester D (@JustMeTurtle) March 14, 2020

Because of social distancing, it means he has to start work earlier in the morning and keep more space between him and other people. His message of hope was liked by more than half a million people.

\"Sometimes it’s hard to keep my legs movin’ and I just wanna stop,\" Meier told \"GMA.\" \"But I have a route to do, and if I quit somebody else is gonna have to come do it. … It started feeling more important to me, like I needed to help the people of my city.\"

Shortage of masks has volunteers sewing a supply for health care heroes

With a severe shortage of masks, volunteers are offering a solution to health care workers on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic.

The staff at Phoebe Putney Memorial Hospital in Albany, Georgia, has about three-and-a-half days of masks left. More than 3,000 a day are being used and discarded.

The answer: a handmade, washable prototype mask which health care workers could place over disposable, N95 masks.

\"It's something I enjoy doing and it's something I felt like I could do for the community,\" said Belinda Wright, a volunteer who helps sew the reusable masks.

Scott Steiner, CEO of Phoebe Putney, told ABC News the lack of N95 masks are a concern as they help protect doctors and nurses from contracting infectious diseases.

\"We've got more than 50 people making these right now,\" Steiner said. \"We think we can make 200,000 of them.\"

2020 grads host #Coronamencement ceremonies

As many universities closed last week due to the coronavirus, many seniors across the country scrambled to make graduation ceremonies happen.

From the University of Maine to the University of Michigan, seniors celebrated their accomplishments with an impromptu affair and shared photos of it all on social media with the hashtag \"Coronamencement.\"

At Wellesley College, where senior events are a tradition, students spent the entire Saturday coming together and doing it all in one day.

\"PHOTO:
Courtesy Sandra Riano
PHOTO: Wellesley students celebrate "coronamencement."
>

\"We crammed an entire senior week into those few hours and doing as much as we could to appreciate the time that we had together,\" said Claudia Lamprecht, a senior at Wellesley.

Lamprecht said that their \"senior week\" was complete with all of the Wellesley traditions, red decorations to signify their 2020 class and a commencement ceremony, which was put together by four students.

\"College is only four years, but the friendships that you make are going to be lifelong,\" said Lamprecht. \"What we’re experiencing right now, I know for a fact that these will be friends for life.\"

Property owner tells restaurants to pay employees, not rent during coronavirus pandemic

Young Investment Company, based in Jonesboro, Arkansas, won’t collect rent from its restaurant tenants amid coronavirus, instead, asking them to \"pay your employees and take care of your family.\"

\"Stay strong. We will get through this together!\" according to a message from the company's Facebook page posted Tuesday.

\"PHOTO:
KAIT
PHOTO: Roots Restaurant in Jonesboro, Ark., is one of five restaurants in the city that have had their April rents waived by their property owner, Young Investments.
>

Young Investment Company owns property that houses Eleanor’s Pizzeria, Roots, City Wok, Main Street Coffee and The Parsonage.

\"Mr. Young doing that for us this month ... that money goes straight to the employees,\" John Myers, co-owner and chef at The Parsonage, told ABC Jonesboro affiliate KAIT.

Girl Scouts set up digital cookie booth to donate boxes to hospital workers

Three Virginia Beach-based Girl Scouts have found a touching way to put a smile on the faces of medical workers who are helping those in need during the novel coronavirus pandemic.

With 600 boxes of cookies left and in-person sale suspended, sisters Sylvie, 14, Julia, 9, and Piper, 6, came up with an idea to launch an online Girl Scout cookie booth with the cookies sold going to medical first responders.

Their mother, Kacey Farrell, said teenage daughter Sylvie, shot and directed a video of her younger sisters introducing their online Girl Scout cookie booth, which has been shared on social media. Support has come in from family, friends and all over the world.

\"PHOTO:
Courtesy Kacey Farrell
PHOTO: Virginia Beach-based girl scouts create a virtual cookie booth to donate cookies to local hospitals.
>

\"With everything going on right now, it seems like our doctors and nurses are going to be hit so hard,\" Farrell said. \"Girl Scout cookies are a small way to say thank you, but it felt like an easy opportunity to let our frontline responders know how grateful and supportive we are.\"

New York City restaurant gives free food to the community

At Miss Ada, a New York City restaurant, staff there are working hard to feed the community amid the coronavirus pandemic.

When too many ingredients were bought for the week before restaurants were told to close, staff there didn’t want them to go to waste and collectively decided to pay it forward by feeding people in the community.

\"It’s been good,\" said sous-chef, Ben Sanderson. \"Tons of people that we know from the neighborhood and people we don’t have been coming in and we’ve been able to talk to them and give them good food.\"

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Miss Ada (@missadanyc) on Mar 15, 2020 at 8:37pm PDT

While they haven’t been charging people for meals, Sanderson says that all donations received as well as money spent toward gift cards through the end of March will be given to staff. So far, they’ve raised $4,000.

\"A lot of people’s lives are up in the air, but I think this has been good because it gives people a chance to come in and do something fun and positive,\" Sanderson said.

Stores create 'elderly-only' hours

Grocery stores across the country have adjusted operating hours amid the coronavirus outbreak in an effort to mitigate risks for elderly or immunocompromised customers.

Companies including Target, Whole Foods, Stop and Shop, have all announced designated times, usually first thing in the morning, to ensure that shoppers susceptible to COVID-19 can get what they need. Read the full story here.

\"PHOTO:
Karen Ducey/Getty Images
PHOTO: A man shops for groceries during special hours open to seniors only at a supermarket in Seattle, March 18, 2020.
>

Siblings send handmade cards to nursing home residents who aren't receiving visitors amid crisis

A group of siblings are turning their downtime into an opportunity to show kindness by sending handmade cards to seniors who are quarantined in assisted living facilities amid the coronavirus crisis.

While schools are closed, Madilyn, 10, Olivia, 9, Cameron, 7 and Jack France, 4, have been busy at work drawing pictures and writing well wishes to people in nursing homes around Massachusetts.

Their cousins Annabelle, 10 and Danika, 8 are also helping with the cause.

\"PHOTO:
Vanessa France
PHOTO: While schools are closed during the coronavirus crisis, Madilyn, 10, Olivia, 9, Cameron, 7 and Jack France, 4, have been busy at work drawing pictures and writing well wishes to people in nursing homes around Massachusetts.
>
\"PHOTO:
Vanessa France
PHOTO: A group of siblings are turning their downtime into an opportunity to show kindness by sending handmade cards to seniors who are quarantined in assisted living facilities amid the coronavirus crisis.
>

\"I explained to them, 'These people in nursing homes are nervous to get this virus themselves.' Being able to draw those pictures and write those letters, it's the least we can do and it makes us feel good too,\" mom Vanessa France told \"Good Morning America.\"

France, a hospice care worker, said her kids have mailed letters to dozens of homes locally.

\"As long as we have more paper, we'll keep doing them,\" she said.

People put up Christmas lights to spread cheer amid coronavirus pandemic

As the global COVID-19 pandemic continues to escalate, people are finding a creative way to stay positive: digging out their Christmas lights.

It might seem strange to see social media callouts for yuletide decorations halfway through March, but Twitter users are urging others to put lights up outside their homes as a sign of hope in this particularly dark time for so many.

My mom thinks people should start putting up Christmas lights in their windows to remind each other that there is still life & light while we #StayTheFHome.

I think she’s on to something.#DoingMyPartCO #CoronavirusUSA #LightsForLife pic.twitter.com/XHxDyORAcS

— Michael 🎧 (@quickbear) March 16, 2020

A friend just shared that an elderly neighbor came to her house and asked her husband to turn on the Christmas lights because there's so much darkness and scariness now. So, there are bright dancing Christmas lights now on in their neighborhood. #coronakindness

— Lisa St. Regis (@LisaStRegis) March 15, 2020

With school, work and virtually all public events canceled for an indefinite period, Mike Griffin and Lane Grindle thought putting lights up could be a safe social distancing activity to do with the kids.

My youngest son was bored today and said, \"can we put Christmas lights on our tree outside to cheer us up?\" Great idea buddy. Lights are on tonight as a sign of hope and the sweet mind of my 10 year old. #Rhodeisland #hope #lovemysons #Christmas #Cumberland pic.twitter.com/qhVjeuLc02

— Mike Griffin (@rhodyknowsbest) March 16, 2020

What if we all put our Christmas lights back up? Then we could get in the car and drive around and look at them. That seems like a fair social distancing activity.

— Lane Grindle (@lanegrindle) March 15, 2020

The hashtag \"lightsforlife\" has since gained traction online- with more and more users sharing pictures and videos of their decorations going up.

There are dark times ahead, but I can still put love & light out into the world.

Some folks have mentioned putting up Christmas lights to cheer up people in quarantine, in isolation, or just to remind the world there’s still light & hope. Here’s my contribution💛#LightsForLife pic.twitter.com/S8Mx8bQ28I

— Sarah Bang (@DrBang_Wx) March 18, 2020

#LightsForLife My living room fairy light wall ✨ pic.twitter.com/QdoBxteWwR

— Rudi the Reader Ⓥ 🧠 (@penru_tondi) March 17, 2020

Georgia volunteers help get supplies for endangered seniors

Right when they’re needed most, volunteers and organizations are doing their part to help limit the elderly’s potential exposure to COVID-19.

Southern Grace Hospice, located just outside Atlanta, has seen a surge in community members offering up their time to get seniors the supplies they need.

\"We want to make sure all our seniors are food secure for at least two weeks,\" said Yasna Grainger, community liaison for Southern Grace Hospice.

\"PHOTO:
Courtesy Southern Grace Hospice
PHOTO: volunteers step up to help get supplies for endangered seniors in midst of the novel coronavirus outbreak.
>

That help is coming in the form of parents, teachers and teens stopping by to drop off food, water and disinfecting supplies.

\"Our patients really appreciate the community stepping up,\" Grainger said. \"Please keep the donations coming.\"

#BetterTogether brings hope for parents and educators on Twitter

As parents juggle working from home and helping kids with schoolwork now that schools are closed, #BetterTogether is uniting parents and educators on social media and helping many get through this time.

As an educator I must say that I'm really enjoying this partnership between teachers and parents! So many parents asking for homework and teaching strategies to make sure learning continues. Let's keep it going! 👏🏾👏🏾👏🏾 #BetterTogether #COVID19

— April Young 🇵🇦 (@MsYoung_Teaches) March 18, 2020

Reading + classical music = continuing their education; it just looks a bit different! #BetterTogether ❤️🇺🇸💙 pic.twitter.com/GADBZF7u8C

— Lyn (@Lyn_Mizanin) March 16, 2020

My kitchen island has become my classroom space for the next couple weeks. Let’s do this! 💪🏽 #bettertogether pic.twitter.com/u6TPMjHrbS

— Jaime Giordano (@jaime_giordano) March 16, 2020

Since the hashtag started online, many parents have shared photos and videos of working remotely with their kids and educators have also shared advice and tips for parents about how to navigate through online work.

Man wishes wife happy anniversary outside her nursing home

When a nursing home in Stafford Springs, Connecticut, prevented people from visiting due to the coronavirus, Bob Shellard, 90, knew he had to do something special for his wife, Nancy, 88, who was a patient there, on their wedding anniversary.

So, Shellard spent three days making a sign for his wife out of red felt and glitter to make a heart, and wrote in the middle, \"I've loved you 67 years and I still do. Happy Anniversary.\"

\"PHOTO:
Courtesy Laura Mikolajczak
PHOTO: Man holds sign for his wife outside of nursing home for their 67th anniversary after they ban visitors due to coronavirus
>

On the big day, Shellard stood outside the nursing home with his daughter, Laura, to surprise his wife, and when she saw, she smiled from ear to ear, blew kisses and told the staff she \"felt like a queen.\"

\"I tell my dad that she may not remember that we've been there, but it's the feeling we leave her with,\" Laura said. \"It stays with her for the day.\"

Chef serves up meals to families in need in his community

A Virginia chef is stepping up as COVID-19 school closures and work reductions find many kids and their families missing out on free hot meals.

During the pandemic, David Gaus of Arlington, is reducing operations at Bayou Bakery. But with his extra time, Gaus is feeding community members in need.

\"The one thing I know how to do right now is cook so it's like, 'What can I do?' If I can make a big pot of beans and feed some people, that's kind of at its core of what this is.\"

Video: Virginia chef serves up meals to families in need in his community

Gaus kicked off his initiative March 17. So far he's served 70 lunches with beans, rice and fresh fruit.

\"The main reason for getting this started was literally to take care of my team and their kids,\" Gaus said. \"They're part of this effected issue with the schools closing.\"

Gaus partnered with local community organizations like Real Food for Kids to plan and raise funds to fuel his operation.

\"We need all the positive energy that we can [get] right now, so it's been amazing,\" Gaus told \"GMA.\"

\"When there's a crisis, people drop what they're doing and they just want to help,\" he said.

Art teacher streams live classes to kids who are quarantined

An elementary art teacher is bringing creative fun/a> to young students who are out of school during the coronavirus outbreak.

\"I want to engage kids while they're sitting at home,\" Cassie Stephens, a teacher at Johnson Elementary School in Franklin, Tennessee, told \"Good Morning America.\" \"I want them to experience art for normalcy. We are all scared, and confused.\"

Video: Art teacher offers live classes to kids amid coronavirus crisis

Over 30,000 tuned in Monday as Stephens demonstrated a robot art project for children via Instagram and Facebook Live.

Stephens has been teaching art for 21 years. When she learned Franklin Special School District would be closed until April 6, she found a way to make art classes accessible virtually.

\"My email is flooded with thanks yous and kids holding up their art, and that means the world to me,\" Stephens said.

'COVID-19 messengers' help others with errands

Over 200 people have signed up on Instagram to help run errands for those who can't leave their home due to coronavirus.

Emmalyn Sullivan, 26, from New York City, started the Instagram page called \"Covid19_messengers\" to enlist volunteers who are willing to run simple errands to help out those who can't leave their homes. Since she started the account four days ago, hundreds have signed up.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by @covid19_messengers on Mar 16, 2020 at 12:21pm PDT

\"I'm the kind of person that can't not help,\" Sullivan told \"GMA.\" \"I can't see a problem and not fix it, but this is such a hopeless, helpless situation. How are you supposed to attack an invisible thing that is affecting everyone?\"

She added, \"We've been live for three days and the amount that has been accomplished, the amount of help we've been able to provide -- I'm in awe.\"

The music plays on as opera houses and concert halls turn to streaming

The Metropolitan Opera's free nightly opera streams began on Monday evening with \"Carmen\" and became overloaded with \"unprecedented demand.\" It was so popular that the traffic prevented some from participating online.

2/ We are doing everything we can to increase capacity and will provide specific instruction later today for how best to access upcoming streams. Please bear with us and stay healthy and safe.

— Metropolitan Opera (@MetOpera) March 17, 2020

The online stream of Bizet's \"Carmen,\" which was conducted by Yannick Nezet-Seguin in 2010, is just the first of many \"Nightly Met Opera Streams\" during the Met Opera's coronavirus closure, where they'll be streaming a different opera for free through their Met Opera on Demand service, which is reachable through their homepage.

\"We'd like to provide some grand opera solace to opera lovers in these extraordinarily difficult times,\" said Met General Manager Peter Gelb.

Other musical halls across globe like the Berlin State Opera and the Kimmel Center in Philadelphia, home of the Philadelphia Orchestra, began streaming their performances too. Meanwhile, Met orchestra musicians are streaming their own performances at home.

#MusicConnectsUS 🎶 Raise your hand if you're ready for The @metopera #LIVEinHD broadcast of Carmen? Can't wait? Here's a little preview of some melodies you might hear. Yoon Kwon Costello performs selections from Sarasate's Carmen Fantasy. (Full performance on our website) pic.twitter.com/TCIliExOux

— METOrchMusicians (@METOrchestra) March 16, 2020

Up next tonight, the Met will be streaming \"La Boheme,\" \"Il Trovatore\" comes Wednesday night, and on Thursday, \"La Traviata.\"

Family sings 'Happy Birthday' to 100-year-old outside window during coronavirus crisis

A Massachusetts family sang \"Happy Birthday\" to their 100-year-old loved one outside a nursing home window Sunday.

Millie Erickson, a resident of Sterling Village in Sterling, Massachusetts, was greeted by a crowd of familiar faces to celebrate her becoming a centenarian while she's in quarantine.

\"PHOTO:
WCVB
PHOTO: Millie Erickson, a resident of Sterling Village in Sterling, Massachusetts, was greeted by family to celebrate her becoming a centenarian on March 15. Her son, Gary Erickson said she is in quarantine as the coronavirus outbreak effects the globe.
>
\"PHOTO:
WCVB
PHOTO: Family gathers outside Sterling Village in Sterling, Massachusetts, where Millie Erickson, a resident, is celebrating her 100th birthday. Millie is in quarantine for safety amid the coronavirus outbreak.
>

The CDC says older adults are at higher risk for COVID-19, and health officials in several states have recommended the elderly stay home as the crisis continues.

\"It was really nice that they let us do that,\" Gary Erickson told ABC affiliate WCVB-TV in Boston. \"She doesn't usually cry, but she did.\"

Read the full story here.

Water, internet utilities pledge to maintain service if customers can't pay

Hundreds of local water companies and telephone and internet providers are promising to maintain service to customers who may not be able to pay all their bills during the COVID-19 pandemic response.

One hundred and thirteen local water systems and utilities serving 75 million Americans will not shut off water service to customers who can't pay their bills during the coronavirus crisis, according to data collected by the advocacy group Food and Water Watch.

The Federal Communications Commission also says 185 broadband and telephone providers have pledged to keep service available to customers who may not be able to pay bills during the COVID-19 pandemic response. Those providers, many of which are in rural areas, have also promised to make Wi-Fi hotspots available to anyone who needs them.

Teachers raise money for students on free and reduced lunch as schools close over coronavirus

Three teachers at Yorktown High School in Arlington, Virginia decided they wanted to help the thousands of students who rely on free and reduced meals at school amid possible school closures over the coronivarus pandemic.

Laurie Vena, a chemistry teacher at Yorktown High, brainstormed with physics teachers Aaron Schuetz and Deborah Waldron.

Together the trio launched a GoFundMe account with the goal of raising enough money to give $100 grocery gift cards to each of the approximately 8,300 Arlington Public Schools students who receive free or reduced lunches.

\"PHOTO:
Jeff Gritchen/Orange County Register/SCNG via Zuma Press via Newscom
PHOTO: Visitors cross Harbor Blvd. as they leave Disneyland in Anaheim, Calif., March 12, 2020.
>

Just two days after launching effort, the teachers have raised just over $37,000 of their $830,000 goal.

\"This is what we want our community to be so we need to show our kids that this is who we are,\" Vena told \"Good Morning America.\"

Arlington Public Schools, which has more than 28,000 students in total, announced school closures March 16.

Josh Gad aka 'Frozen's' Olaf reads to kids on Twitter amid coronavirus quarantine

During the nationwide quarantine, \"Frozen\" actor Josh Gad has been reading to fans on Twitter -- be they young or old -- each night since March 13.

\"Since we're all stuck at home right now I figured we would have a little fun together,\" Gad said.

Video: Josh Gad is reading books to kids on Twitter amid coronavirus quarantine

Gad, also known as the voice of the beloved character \"Olaf,\" has read \"Olivia Goes to Venice\" by Ian Falconer, \"The Day the Crayons Quit\" by Drew Daywalt and \"The Giving Tree\" by Shel Silverstein.

\"I'll try to provide at least 10 minutes of day care to you and your families a night while we're going through this unprecedented global event,\" said Gad, a father of two.

\"I love you all. I'm hoping you're all healthy and safe, wherever you are, and hopefully I will see you all very soon. Take care.\"

Chick-Fil-A delivers more than 350 free meals to hospital workers

A Chick-Fil-A in Vancouver brightened the day of hospital workers at PeaceHealth Southwest Medical Center when they recently treated them to a free meal.

On March 14, Sable Phillippi was working a busy nursing shift and taking care of patients when around lunchtime, an announcement was made over the hospital's PA system that Chick-Fil-A would be providing free meals to show their appreciation.

View this post on Instagram

Thank you Chick-fil-a for the free lunch at work. Delicious! #coronavirusnurses #coronavirusfrontline #chickfila

A post shared by Sable Phillippi (@the.sable.p) on Mar 15, 2020 at 11:00pm PDT

Phillippi, 33, was shocked when she saw Chick-Fil-A staff bring in bags and boxes of hot food.

\"There was just bag after bag and box after box,\" she told \"GMA.\" \"It's still helping me through the rest of my week.\"

Phillippi took to Instagram to thank the fast food restaurant for its act of kindness.

\"I think as caregivers, we love helping people and we love taking care of people especially in critical times of need,\" Philippi said. \"And we kind of forget to sometimes take care of ourselves, so this is something that I'll remember when I look back at this time.\"

Mom Tina, who shared Phillippi's post on Twitter, said she's grateful to Chick-Fil-A for taking care of her daughter.

She told \"GMA,\" \"It meant so much to everyone there and I just started crying. It's been such a stressful and emotional time.\"

Disneyland Resort to donate excess food during closure due to coronavirus

Disneyland closed its doors starting March 14 as the number of confirmed coronavirus cases and deaths rose in the United States.

That same day, Disneyland Resort announced it'll donate all excess food to the Second Harvest Food Bank of Orange County during the closure.

\"PHOTO:
WJLA
PHOTO: Deborah Waldron, left, and Laurie Vena, teachers at Yorktown High School in Arlington, Virginia, are raising money for students.
>

In a blog post Disney Parks wrote, \"[W]hile closely following food safety guidelines, excess inventory of dairy, fruit, vegetables, packaged goods and banquet meals is being donated.\"

Video: Disneyland donates food after closing due to coronavirus

The Walt Disney Company is the parent company of ABC News and \"Good Morning America.\"6

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