Nurses across New York City walked out on the job on Monday after their union and employers failed to agree on a new contract.
Nearly 15,000 nurses at Mount Sinai Hospital, Mount Sinai Morningside and West, Montefiore, and NewYork-Presbyterian started their strike at 6 a.m. The New York State Nurses Association demanded an increase in pay for nurses, safe staffing levels to improve the nurse-to-patient ratio, full health care benefits and pension and protection from workplace violence.
Hospitals argued that the demands were too costly and said they had spent millions preparing for a strike – including hiring replacement nurses. Mount Sinai released a statement that reads, “Unfortunately, NYSNA decided to move forward with its strike while refusing to move on from its extreme economic demands, which we cannot agree to, but we are ready with 1,400 qualified and specialized nurses – and prepared to continue to provide safe patient care for as long as this strike lasts.”
Gov. Kathy Hochul urged both sides to stay at the table and negotiate, but is now preparing for a state of emergency. The state’s Department of Health will also supply staff to affected hospitals.
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani will attend the strike at 9:45 a.m.
I am no mathmatician but 1,400 does not equal 15,000.
Good luck to the striking nurses! Hope you and get everything you are asking for and more!
I got the same answer.
I am no mathmatician but 1,400 does not equal 15,000
I bet that depends on how advanced and theoretical your math is 🤔
I have a theoretical degree in mathematology.
May be something like 15,000 is the amount participating in the strike, but 1,400 are how many would be on any given shift?
Just a theory, but 1,400 might cover critical needs. IOW, care that cannot be transferred nor delayed.
Assuming each of the 15k striking nurses works three 12hr shifts a week and each of the 1.4k scab nurses work seven 12hr shifts a week then the scabs can only cover ~3,262 12hr shifts. Still a shortage.
Even if all 15k worked 12-hour shifts for just 3-days a week with no OT (15000*12*3), that’s still 540,000 labor-hours. If the 1.4k scrub nurses compensate by working 16-hour shifts 7-days a week, that’s only 156,800 labor-hours. Under impossible conditions, they still wouldn’t even match 1/3rd the original volume.
I didn’t mean to imply it wasn’t.
I didn’t think you were. Just decided to do the math showing that the hospitals “investment” in these scabs means there will definitely be a decline in patient care.


