The nurses of New York City are a-strikin’. In what has been touted as the largest nurse strike in the city’s history, 15,000 nurses from Mount Sinai, Montefiore, and NewYork-Presbyterian hospitals started striking on Jan. 12. The issues at the top of the docket include addressing expected cuts in health benefits, better workplace violence protections, and safer staffing. Almost immediately, the strike was shrouded in drama. Three Mount Sinai labor and delivery nurses were fired the day before the strike began. The unit had been experiencing “aggressive” union busting, including a prior incident in which nurses were disciplined after going to a union meeting, a Jan. 13 New York State Nurses Association release claims. According to the hospital’s statement, these nurses were terminated for “interfering with patient safety by deliberately sabotaging [its] emergency preparedness drills,” including allegedly hiding critical supplies for newborns from temporary staff and then lying about their involvement, despite security footage of the incident. Union President Nancy Hagans also alleged in a Jan. 14 statement that Montefiore attempted to “slander” and “disrespect” its nurses through “outrageous PR campaigns.” Montefiore didn’t respond to a request for comment about the allegations or any campaigns it may be running. Here’s where everything currently stands.—NO |