Friday’s count brings the county’s total confirmed cases to 39,191. With the 13 deaths, that total is now at 514.
The new walk up COVID-19 testing site at the Salvation Army’s Pleasant Grove Corps Community Center on Elam Road could not open on July 13.
The county also confirmed nine more deaths, bringing the total to 410.
Mask orders haven taken effect in both Dallas and Tarrant counties.
Employees have been wearing masks for months, but this mandate now applies to everyone coming to the airport.
The sites at the American Airlines Center and the Ellis Davis Field House have been in place since March.
Seven jail team members also tested positive.
They said the model shows it will happen ahead of the Fourth of July holiday.
In Southlake, a Carroll ISD football player who attended summer training at an indoor workout facility has COVID-19.
Testing at Mercy Clinic, located at 775 West Bowie Street in Fort Worth, will be open to the public by appointment at no cost.
Customers can check out materials through the new Library To Go service, Tuesday through Saturday between 10:30 a.m. and 5:30 p.m.
No additional deaths were reported.
Dallas County Health and Human Services also reported 225 new cases, bringing the total case count in the county to 7,904.
Publically available data suggests Tarrant County has reached a plateau in new daily COVID-19 cases.
There are 5 additional deaths being reported as well.
They were set to end after May 31.
Tarrant County has increased test sites, but has had trouble filling appointment slots.
So far, the county has seen 3,695 positive cases and 780 recoveries.
The deceased include a man in his 50s, two men in their 80s, a woman in her 50s and two women in their 80s.
The total case count is up to 4,370 in Dallas County.
The Mavs and the NBA are supporting ongoing COVID-19 relief efforts through the sales of Hardwood Classic face coverings.
The deceased include a man in his 80s from Benbrook and a man in his 60s from Fort Worth.
Inseparable for almost 40 years, COVID-19 changed all that for Lorenzo and Elba Banales on April 11.
Officials said the two new deaths are a Dallas man in his 40s who was hospitalized and a woman in her 70s.
Arnoldo Almeida, who had a long-term, pre-existing medical condition, was serving a drug sentence at the facility.
The deceased was a man in his 60s from Grand Prairie who was critically ill in an area hospital.
The deaths include a man in his 80s from an unincorporated area of Tarrant County and a Fort Worth man in his 60s.
The deceased include a woman in her 90s and a man in his 40s, both from Fort Worth, and a man in his 90s from Arlington.
The officer’s most recent day on the job was Tuesday, April 14.
She did not say who that person is.
Tarrant County now has 30 confirmed deaths from the COVID-19 virus and 157 people have recovered.
Susan Dorety’s lawsuit says the company prevented her husband, Michael from leaving the ship while his health deteriorated.
Three were hospitalized while the others self-quarantined at home.
A Garland resident in her 80s is the 43rd person to die from the disease in Dallas County.
Officials said the deaths were a man in his 70s and two men and a woman in their 80s.
At least 10 more deaths from the new coronavirus were reported in Dallas County on Tuesday.
Fort Worth Public Library Director Manya Shorr is coordinating the collection effort which begins Wednesday, April 15.
Dallas County Judge Clay Jenkins says the federal government was planning to pull its funding after April 10.
Whitley said emergency management teams in the county have been preparing for an uptick in COVID-19 cases for weeks.
Two of the deceased are from Fort Worth, one is from River Oaks, and one is from Grand Prairie and one from Haltom City.