New York News Beep
  • News Beep
  • New York
  • NYC
  • Manhattan
  • Brooklyn
  • Queens
  • The Bronx
  • Staten Island
  • United States
New York News Beep
New York News Beep
  • News Beep
  • New York
  • NYC
  • Manhattan
  • Brooklyn
  • Queens
  • The Bronx
  • Staten Island
  • United States
Patient care continues as nurses from NYC hospitals enter second day of strike
NNew York City

Patient care continues as nurses from NYC hospitals enter second day of strike

  • January 14, 2026

people wearing red clothes and holding red signs during the nurses strike in NYC

The nurses strike is on its second day in NYC.

Photo by Dean Moses

Day two of what is likely the largest nurses’ strike in NYC history continued on Tuesday with nearly 15,000 caregivers having walked off their normal rounds at major NYC hospitals. 

Braving the freezing temperatures, nurses from the New York State Nurses Association (NYSNA) continued to picket outside of Mount Sinai and NewYork-Presbyterian locations in Manhattan, and Montefiore facilities in the Bronx. The nurses are striking for better pay, more staff and improved workplace protections. Talks with management have stalled, which led to the strike.

Nurses continue to strike on Jan. 13, 2026, on day two of the nurses stike outside Mount Sinai Hospital.Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

The union also alleged on Jan. 13 that Mount Sinai unlawfully fired three labor and delivery nurses, which NYSNA representatives called an act of “intimidation” while contract negotiations were ongoing.

“Instead of addressing the most important issues, patient and nurse safety, hospital management has cowardly and unlawfully disciplined and terminated NYSNA nurses. Management’s disrespectful treatment of frontline nurse heroes is despicable, but they cannot silence our union voice.

Mount Sinai stated that NYSA’s allegation regarding the firings is false.

Meanwhile, a hospital system spokesperson also said 20% of nurses on Monday — the first day of the strike — crossed the picket line and came to work. They anticipate that more caretakers will do the same in the coming days.

Hospitals and emergency rooms remain open during nurses’ strike 

Management from the affected hospitals said they have been preparing for the strike by securing temp agency nurses. Gov. Kathy Hochul declared a disaster emergency in NYC on Jan. 9, ordering hospitals to prepare for “severe staffing shortages” due to the strike.

Nurses on strike outside Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan on Jan. 13, 2026.Photo by Lloyd Mitchell

According to the order, supplemental staffing was added to hospitals and other healthcare facilities to ensure patient care. Mount Sinai said it added 1,400 specialized nurses to its staff. The NYS Health Department will have additional staff on site at all the locations throughout the duration of the strike. 

It is unclear when the strike will end at this point, but all of the hospitals and their emergency rooms are open. amNewYork spoke to patients at NewYork-Presbyterian Millstein, most of whom said they support the nurses in their labor fight. 

Mayor Zohran Mamdani was at the hospital’s picket line on Monday to urge management to reach an agreement with the nurses. He referenced the substantial finances of the affected hospitals, which are privately owned. 

It wasn’t just onsite patients who offered their support to the thousands of nurses on the streets outside hospitals across the city; newly elected Mayor Zohran Mamdani also lent his voice to their cause. Speaking outside New York-Presbyterian Millstein, Mamdani urged the hospitals to reach an agreement.Photo by Dean Moses

“There is no shortage of wealth in the healthcare industry, especially so at the three privately operated hospital groups at which nurses are striking,” the mayor said. 

Some area elected officials, including Rep. Yvette Clarke of Brooklyn, joined Mamdani in defending the nurses.

“Our nurses will always be the bedrock of our healthcare system, and they deserve a fair contract that recognizes their contributions and respects their instrumental role in keeping New Yorkers safe and healthy,’ she said in a statement. “Anything less is simply unacceptable.”

Meanwhile, both management and the nurses encourage patients to go to the hospital or emergency room if they need care. 

  • Tags:
  • New York
  • nurses strike in nyc
  • NY
  • NYC
  • NYC Headlines
  • nyc hospitals
  • NYC News
  • nysna nurses
  • pm newsletter
  • yvette clark
  • Zohran Mamdani
New York News Beep
www.newsbeep.com