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More than 10,000 nurses return to work after ratifying contracts
Summary
More than 10,000 nurses at Montefiore and Mount Sinai returned to work on Feb. 14 after ratifying new three-year contracts; more than 4,200 nurses at NewYork-Presbyterian remain on strike after rejecting a mediators' proposal.
Content
More than 10,000 nurses at Montefiore and Mount Sinai began returning to work on Feb. 14 after voting to ratify new three-year contracts. The contracts were reported to include pay increases and provisions on health-care costs, staffing and workplace protections. The walkout began about a month earlier and was widely discussed as the city's largest nurses' strike in recent memory. The strike continues at NewYork-Presbyterian, where nurses voted against a mediators' proposal that union leadership had endorsed.
Key facts:
- More than 10,000 nurses at Montefiore and Mount Sinai ratified new three-year contracts and began returning to work on Feb. 14.
- The agreements were reported to include pay increases and measures related to health-care costs, staffing standards and workplace protections.
- More than 4,200 nurses at NewYork-Presbyterian remain on strike after voting down a mediators' proposal that NYSNA leadership had accepted.
- NewYork-Presbyterian said it was disappointed the proposal was not ratified, and some nurses at that hospital reported concerns about the voting process.
Summary:
The ratified contracts allowed thousands of nurses at Montefiore and Mount Sinai to resume work, while a separate group of nurses at NewYork-Presbyterian continues its strike. Undetermined at this time.
