This week, after greater than 10 days on the picket line, nurse Zara Roy took to the web for assist, organising a GoFundMe whereas she seems for a brief job.
Whereas her husband, additionally a nurse, continues to work, they’ll’t pay the payments solely on his revenue, she mentioned. “I’m simply making an attempt to be sturdy, to carry on for my household, as a result of financially it truly is a wrestle.”
The mother of two from Westwood, New Jersey, has a baby with disabilities, and he or she firmly helps the union’s demand that nurses’ well being advantages stay intact. “One factor I’ll by no means, ever do,” she mentioned, “is cross the picket line.”
Roy, a restoration room nurse at Mount Sinai Morningside, is among the many 15,000 putting nurses who missed their first paychecks this week, the second full week of the strike that’s the largest of its sort in New York Metropolis historical past. The New York State Nurses Affiliation members have additionally been with out medical health insurance protection since strolling off the job on Jan. 12.
Money-strapped nurses are pulling their youngsters out of day care, creating GoFundMe’s, and scouring job websites for per-diem hospital shifts and Fb teams for nanny and residential nurse gigs. Others are making use of for unemployment and signing up for COBRA.
Starting this week, the putting nurses are eligible to use for unemployment advantages beneath an enlargement of protection for putting employees signed into regulation by Gov. Kathy Hochul final yr. Although not all will apply, if even a fraction of the nurses are discovered eligible to obtain the most $869 weekly profit, the strike will price taxpayers thousands and thousands of {dollars} every week. Although nurses can start making use of this week, they may grow to be eligible for advantages on Jan. 26.
Marjorie Abreu, a NICU nurse at NewYork-Presbyterian Morgan Stanley Youngsters’s Hospital, pulled her son from day care out of concern he’d get sick and he or she wouldn’t be capable to afford his care. The 32-year-old can be within the means of submitting for unemployment.
“I’ve been working since I used to be 16,” she mentioned. “I’ve my grasp’s diploma, my bachelor’s. I by no means thought I might be on this place, unemployed and uninsured.”
NYSNA’s strike fund, which supplies various ranges of economic help on an as-needed foundation, has obtained greater than 300 donations from docs, union members, elected officers and even some celebrities for the reason that strike started, in line with a union supply.
Nurses who spoke with THE CITY mentioned they had been grateful for the strike fund and unemployment advantages, however mentioned that with out their revenue, they’re unable to pay payments or present out-of-pocket well being protection for his or her households.
“It’s disgusting that [the hospitals] would put us out within the chilly like this. We need to be inside caring for our sufferers,” mentioned Roy.
‘Solidarity is vital to me’
Bargaining on the three putting hospital methods — Montefiore, Mount Sinai and NewYork-Presbyterian — resumed on Thursday after negotiations broke down once more over the lengthy weekend. Nurses have been picketing in freezing temperatures, and the forecast requires a serious storm on Sunday dumping greater than 6 inches of snow over the 5 boroughs.
Within the meantime, putting nurses face some powerful decisions. One Mount Sinai Hospital nurse practitioner, who requested to stay nameless, was quoted almost $4,000 a month to enroll her household in COBRA. She and her husband determined they might go with out well being care and enrolled solely their daughter, at a price of greater than $1,000 per thirty days.

The struggles of nurses on the picket line to make ends meet underscore a number of the identical points that introduced them to strike within the first place. Amongst their main calls for is that their employers conform to preserve their well being protection intact, as some hospital methods have tried to cut back or stop their contributions to the union’s well being fund.
Nurses who spoke with THE CITY all agreed that lacking a paycheck hurts, however going with out well being protection for themselves and their dependents is much more distressing. Nonetheless, they’re sustaining their resolve.
“Solidarity is vital to me, and I determine very strongly as a union nurse,” mentioned the Mount Sinai Hospital nurse practitioner. “It’s not a very good scenario however that is, I feel, larger than not having revenue for a few weeks.”
Abreu, the NICU nurse, agreed, noting the union’s calls for for increased nurse-to-patient ratios. “We’ve had such excessive acuity for a very long time, and we would like extra for our sufferers,” she mentioned.
On the picket line, nurses are sustaining a cheery disposition. Roy, the Mount Sinai Morningside nurse, on Wednesday joined her colleagues and gave passers-by high-fives.
Even amid the tumult, nurses have been buoyed by help from elected officers, together with Mayor Zohran Mamdani and leaders of different unions.
The town’s employee and shopper safety commissioner, Sam Levine, joined putting nurses on the Mount Sinai Hospital picket line on Madison Avenue on Thursday and expressed his help for 3 labor and supply nurses who the union says had been unlawfully fired on the eve of the strike.
On Monday, the union representing medical residents and interns will be a part of NYSNA members on the picket line if there is no such thing as a deal by then, in an uncommon transfer the Committee of Interns and Residents – SEIU described as “historic.”
Although solely off-duty docs will take part within the so-called “picket events,” CIR-SEIU mentioned the choice displays the urgency of the nurses’ calls for for higher nurse and affected person security.
“We’re standing with NYSNA as a result of these people are New York’s nurses, they matter, and our metropolis’s well being will depend on them having what they want,” Dr. Miledys Guzman, a Montefiore doctor and CIR-SEIU member, mentioned in a press release.

