Skip to content
Campus Alert Archive
Chapman

Randall Dining Goes Dark: Chapman's 50-Student Norovirus Outbreak Closes the Cafeteria

CAdisease outbreakadvisorymedium confidence
Confirmed Threat

About 50 Chapman University students in Orange, California reported norovirus-like symptoms beginning approximately December 2, 2015, with the Orange County Health Care Agency confirming the source was likely Randall Dining, the main campus cafeteria. Chapman's Dean of Students sent an all-student email notifying the community and announcing the cafeteria's closure for disinfection over the weekend; the story was widely covered nationally when it broke on December 9, 2015.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
Chapman University
Private Masters · CA
~10,000 studentsChapman Emergency Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTEmail
Dear Chapman Students, I am writing to let you know that the University is aware of a gastrointestinal illness affecting a number of students on campus. The Orange County Health Care Agency has been notified and is actively investigating. As a precautionary measure, Randall Dining has been closed and will be thoroughly disinfected before it reopens. We are providing alternative food options in the interim. If you are experiencing symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, or stomach cramps, please stay in your room and contact Student Health Services. Practice frequent and thorough handwashing with soap and water -- hand sanitizer alone is not effective against norovirus. We will keep you updated as we learn more.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The cafeteria closure decision was made proactively for disinfection -- an uncommon but high-impact intervention that removes the amplifying vehicle from the transmission chain.
The instruction that 'hand sanitizer alone is not effective against norovirus' is a critical public health message; alcohol-based sanitizers have limited efficacy against non-enveloped viruses like norovirus.
Randall Dining, Chapman's primary dining commons, serves a large fraction of the residential student body daily -- making it a high-efficiency transmission point for a foodborne or surface-borne pathogen.
ALL CLEAREmail
Randall Dining has been thoroughly disinfected and will reopen for breakfast this morning on its regular schedule. Chapman dining staff have completed training from the Orange County Health Care Agency on safe food handling practices during and after a norovirus outbreak. We continue to ask all students to wash their hands frequently with soap and water, especially before eating and after using the restroom. Students who are still experiencing symptoms should not return to shared dining spaces until they have been symptom-free for at least 48 hours.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

The 48-hour symptom-free requirement before returning to shared dining is standard norovirus infection-control guidance from the CDC.
Requiring dining staff to complete Orange County Health Care Agency training before reopening added a compliance layer beyond physical disinfection.
Opening Randall Dining for breakfast on Monday, after a weekend closure, minimized disruption to students preparing for finals while ensuring adequate disinfection time.
Context

Background

Chapman University's December 2015 norovirus outbreak attracted national media attention partly because of its cafeteria-closure response -- a decisive, disruptive intervention that is relatively rare in campus outbreaks. About 50 students reported symptoms beginning December 2, with laboratory confirmation of norovirus in two cases. The Orange County Health Care Agency identified Randall Dining as the likely source, though officials noted that norovirus has multiple transmission pathways and the exact origin could not be definitively confirmed. The Chapman Newsroom described a multifaceted response: physical disinfection of the dining commons, staff training by county health officials, and student wellness communication emphasizing that hand sanitizer is insufficient against norovirus. The cafeteria closed Friday and reopened Monday. NBC and CBS Los Angeles reported the story nationally when it broke December 9, 2015. The case illustrates that campus dining halls -- even those that pass routine inspections -- can be rapid-amplification settings for norovirus introductions from symptomatic food handlers or contaminated surfaces.
Analysis

Key Findings

The cafeteria (Randall Dining) was closed for a full weekend for disinfection -- an uncommon but decisive intervention that removes the likely amplifying vehicle from the transmission chain
Hand sanitizer's ineffectiveness against norovirus was explicitly communicated, reflecting a public health message that remains underappreciated by students
About 50 students were symptomatic but only 2 were laboratory-confirmed -- reflecting that norovirus outbreaks are typically tracked by syndromic surveillance rather than universal testing
The Orange County Health Care Agency identified the cafeteria as the likely source but could not definitively confirm the origin, consistent with how most campus norovirus investigations conclude
Outcome
The cafeteria was closed and disinfected Friday through Sunday; it reopened Monday morning. About 50 students reported symptoms; 2 were confirmed by lab test to have norovirus. No hospitalizations were widely reported.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. News
  3. News
  4. News
  5. News
Tags
norovirusdisease-outbreakpublic-healthdining-hallcafeteriacaliforniaorange-countyadvisory
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion