NYTimes
nytimes.com › 2026 › 01 › 12 › nyregion › nurses-strike-hospitals-nyc.html
Nearly 15,000 Nurses Go on Strike at Major New York City Hospitals - The New York Times
... Nearly 15,000 nurses at major New York City hospitals went on strike on Monday, demanding more robust staffing levels, higher pay and better safety precautions.CreditCredit...Vincent Alban/The New York Times
Published 2 days ago
NYTimes
nytimes.com › 2026 › 01 › 14 › nyregion › nyc-nurses-striking-again-different.html
As N.Y.C. Nurses’ Strike Continues, Both Sides Prepare for a Long Fight - The New York Times
20 hours ago - Nurses from the NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center are among nearly 15,000 nurses on strike in New York City.Credit...Vincent Alban/The New York Times ... Jan. 14, 2026 · Two days into the largest nursing strike New York City has seen in decades, Mount Sinai Hospital made a startling accusation.
In the News
Videos
01:15
NYC nurses strike enters day 4 - YouTube
11:55
Day 3 of strike: Fired NYC nurses share reported voicemail from ...
00:24
NYC nurses strike enters Day 4, surpassing 2023 walkout - YouTube
02:45
Largest nurses strike in NYC history slogs through third day - YouTube
01:53
Nurses strike enters second day in NYC - YouTube
02:31
NYC nurses strike heads into Day 2 - YouTube
New York State Nurses Association
nysna.org › press › nyc-nurses-strike-montefiore-slanders-nurses-instead-investing-communities
NYC Nurses Strike: Montefiore Slanders Nurses Instead of Investing in Communities | New York State Nurses Association
Instead of following the lead of New York City’s eight safety-net hospitals and Northwell Health’s three hospitals on Long Island that all reached tentative agreements with nurses to avert strikes, New York City’s wealthiest academic hospitals are forcing nurses out on strike and refusing to agree to NYSNA's proposal to continue nurses’ health benefits.
NYTimes
nytimes.com › 2026 › 01 › 13 › nyregion › what-to-know-nyc-nurses-strike.html
What to Know About the NYC Nurses’ Strike and How It Affects Hospital Patients - The New York Times
2 days ago - Nearly 15,000 nurses went on strike Monday at some of New York City’s top hospitals, with workers demanding more robust staffing and higher pay. ... Striking nurses rallied on Monday outside NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia Hospital in Upper Manhattan.Credit...Vincent Alban/The New York Times ... Jan. 13, 2026 · A nurses’ strike in New York City entered its second day on Tuesday with some of the city’s major hospitals targeted by the walkout, including NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia, Montefiore Medical Center and the main campus of Mount Sinai Hospital, along with two other major hospitals within the Mount Sinai system.
New York State Nurses Association
nysna.org › press › hospitals-force-nearly-15000-nysna-nurses-out-largest-nurse-strike-new-york-city-history
Hospitals Force Nearly 15,000 NYSNA Nurses Out on Largest Nurse Strike in New York City History | New York State Nurses Association
These cuts would impact not just striking nurses at Mount Sinai, Mount Sinai Morningside and West and NewYork-Presbyterian, but nearly 27,000 nurses at over 50 hospitals around the state who are enrolled in NYSNA’s health benefit plan. Video and audio of our strike announcement is available for media to use.
New York State Nurses Association
nysna.org › press › largest-nurse-strike-nyc-history-continues-second-day
Largest Nurse Strike in NYC History Continues into Second Day | New York State Nurses Association
Tuesday is the second day of the largest nurse strike in New York City history with 15,000 NYSNA nurses from Mount Sinai Hospital, Mount Sinai Morningside and West, and NewYork-Presbyterian who are on strike demanding hospitals take action to protect patient and nurse safety, including agreeing to maintain health benefits for frontline nurses.
POLITICO
politico.com › news › 2026 › 01 › 12 › thousands-of-new-york-city-hospital-nurses-go-on-strike-00721612
Nearly 15,000 nurses go on strike at top New York City hospitals - POLITICO
3 days ago - Union leaders said in their strike announcement that management from the three health systems “barely met with mediators,” and some left negotiating tables “as early as 7:30, showing that they had zero interest in averting a strike.” · “It is deeply offensive that they would rather use their billions to fight against their own nurses than settle a fair contract,” union President Nancy Hagans said in a statement.