Health & Fitness
15K Minnesota Nurses Set To Strike: 16 Hospitals Impacted (List)
Negotiations between nurses and hospital executives began in March, with wages, understaffing and nurse retention taking center stage.

MINNEAPOLIS — Approximately 15,000 nurses are set to strike for three days later this month, the Minnesota Nurses Association (MNA) announced Thursday.
The strike will begin on Sept. 12 and will be the largest private-sector nurses’ strike in U.S. history, according to the nurses' union.
It will also be the first time that Twin Cities and Twin Ports nurses have gone out on strike together.
Find out what's happening in Minneapolisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
"Hospital executives with million-dollar salaries have created a crisis of retention and care in our healthcare system, as more nurses are leaving the bedside, putting quality patient care at risk," said Mary C. Turner, an RN at North Memorial Hospital and the president of the MNA.
"Nurses do not take this decision lightly, but we are determined to take a stand at the bargaining table, and on the sidewalk if necessary, to put patients before profits in our hospitals."
Find out what's happening in Minneapolisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Negotiations between nurses and hospital executives began in March, with the issues of wages, understaffing and nurse retention taking center stage.
"Corporate healthcare policies in our hospitals have left nurses understaffed and overworked, while patients are overcharged, local hospitals and services are closed, and executives take home million-dollar paychecks," said Chris Rubesch, RN at Essentia in Duluth and First Vice President of the Minnesota Nurses Association.
"Nurses have one priority in our hospitals, to take care of our patients, and we are determined to fight for fair contracts so nurses can stay at the bedside to provide the quality care our patients deserve."
Also read: Pay Disparity? Union Releases Data On MN Hospital CEO vs. Nurse Pay
The following 16 hospitals will be impacted by the strike unless a deal is reached between nurses and hospital administrators:
- Riverside
- Southdale
- St. Joseph’s
- St. John’s
- St. Mary’s Duluth
- St. Mary’s Superior
- Essentia Moose Lake
- Methodist
- Abbott Northwestern
- Mercy
- United
- Unity
- Children’s Minneapolis
- Children’s St. Paul
- North Memorial
- St. Luke’s
Thursday's announcement from the MNA comes after nurses voted on Aug. 16 to authorize a strike.
The Twin Cities Hospitals Group — which represents Methodist, North Memorial, Fairview, and Children's Hospitals — sent Patch the following statement on Thursday:
We are disappointed the nurses’ union today has rushed into an intent to strike notification and refuses to exhaust all available means to avoid potential disruption to patient care including our repeated offers of an outside mediator. Mediation was successfully used in previous contract talks and we believe it represents a practical way to bring focus and clarity to the negotiations. We encourage the nurses’ union and its supporters to focus on the pathways we’ve successfully used in the past.
We understand the past two years have been hard on everyone in health care. Our care teams all worked exceptionally hard to care for patients and care for each other. Today, our non-profit hospitals continue to recover financially from the COVID-19 pandemic and the changes the pandemic brought to the workforce and our community. Despite the financial challenges to our hospitals, we are proud to have offered our nurses the largest wage increases in 15 years while agreeing to keep nurses’ benefits unchanged for the life of the contract. The nurses’ union continued demands for wage increases of more than 30 percent remain unreasonable, unrealistic and unaffordable.
It is important for the public to note: our hospitals are open and will remain open to serve the community. We will continue our efforts at the negotiating table to reach reasonable agreements and avoid any actions that would interrupt patient care. We assume the union will do the same. We remain committed to serving our community and keeping our focus on the patients we serve.
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