Home / Health / NYC Nurses Strike Nears End with Tentative Deals
NYC Nurses Strike Nears End with Tentative Deals
9 Feb
Summary
- 10,500 nurses reached tentative agreements with major hospital systems.
- Contracts include a 12% salary increase over three years.
- Nurses fought for fair wages, safe staffing, and workplace safety.

The significant nursing strike in New York City, involving approximately 10,500 members of the New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA), is nearing a resolution. Tentative agreements have been reached with Montefiore and Mount Sinai hospital systems, with ratification votes scheduled to determine their approval. If ratified, nurses are expected to return to work by the end of the week.
The tentative contracts address key demands, including enforceable safe staffing ratios, enhanced protections against workplace violence, and the maintenance of health benefits without increased out-of-pocket costs for frontline nurses. The agreement also stipulates a salary increase of over 12% spread across a three-year contract period.
Nurses began their strike on January 12, citing concerns over fair compensation, adequate staffing levels, and workplace safety. The union had previously expressed concerns that hospitals threatened to reduce healthcare benefits and roll back safety standards. While agreements have been reached with some institutions, around 4,200 nurses remain on strike at NewYork-Presbyterian, where no accord has yet been finalized.




