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  The MTA is projecting billions in revenue from proposed NYC-based gaming halls, which are poised to win up to three licenses later this year. This article originally appeared in The City. By Jose Martinez and Lauren Hartley Bronx Voice October 23, 2025 BRONX NEWS - New York’s mass-transit system is banking on billions of dollars from the state’s bet to bring full-scale casinos to the city. With three gaming-palace proposals still on the table — two in Queens and one in The Bronx — the MTA is counting on close to $2 billion through 2029 just from casino-licensing fees earmarked for the transportation authority’s annual operating budget. Billions more could come from tax revenue, depending on how licenses are awarded.  “More service, better service, no layoffs,” Janno Lieber , MTA chairperson and chief executive, said Oct. 10 in response to a question from THE CITY about the potential impact of casinos on the transit system. “That’s what we accomplished thank...

Nurses End Strike, Reach Tentative Agreements with Montefiore and Mount Sinai Hospitals

Nurses at Mt. Sinai Hospital in the Upper Side took party in a city-wide strike on Monday.

A band playing at the picket line outside Mt. Sinai Hospital on the Upper East Side on Monday | Stephon Johnson/THE CITY

By Claudia Irizarry Aponte, The City

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This article was originally published on by THE CITY


NEW YORK - Nurses at Montefiore Medical Center and Mount Sinai Hospital ended their three-day strike and returned to work Thursday morning after reaching a tentative late-night agreement with both hospitals for improved staffing standards at the hospitals. At Montefiore, nurses won a 19% wage increase over three years. 


The deal, pending a ratification vote, meant that more than 7,000 nurses returned to work at 7 a.m. Thursday. The nurses, who are members of the New York State Nurses Association, had been on strike since Monday morning after talks with both hospitals about staffing ratios stalled over the weekend.



“Through our unity and by putting it all on the line, we won enforceable safe staffing ratios at both Montefiore and Mount Sinai where nurses went on strike for patient care,” NYSNA President Nancy Hagans said in a statement. “Today, we can return to work with our heads held high, knowing that our victory means safer care for our patients and more sustainable jobs for our profession.”


Montefiore and Mount Sinai agreed to terms for staffing ratios similar to those ratified by nurses at eight other city hospitals that averted a strike last week — including Mount Sinai’s Morningside and West campuses. 


The two hospitals said in separate statements ahead of a union press conference about the deal scheduled for later on Thursday morning that they welcomed their tentative agreements with the union.



“It is fair and responsible, and it puts patients first,” Frances Cartwright, the chief nursing officer and senior vice president at Mount Sinai, said in a statement.  


‘A Better Environment’


At around 3 a.m. Thursday, Montefiore announced it would add more than 170 new nursing positions and new, enforceable, safe staffing ratios in its emergency department — including fines for failing to comply with those ratios.


“We came to these bargaining sessions with great respect for our nurses and with proposals that reflect their priorities in terms of wages, benefits, safety, and staffing,” said Dr. Philip O. Ozuah, the president and CEO of Montefiore. “We are pleased to offer a 19% wage increase, benefits that match or exceed those of our peer institutions, more than 170 new nursing positions and a generous plan to address recruitment and retention.


“We are grateful for the dedication and commitment of our nurses who have served through very challenging circumstances over the past several years,” he added.


Mount Sinai, which released fewer details about the deal, also agreed to immediately improved staffing ratios, according to the union.





Gov. Kathy Hochul greeted nurses at Mount Sinai Hospital on the Upper East Side early Thursday morning to congratulate them as they returned to work.


“We were in constant communication with the nurses and the administration – coming to a resolution to get thousands of nurses back on the job where they want to be, but in a way that’s going to be safer for our patients,” she said.


“With new staffing ratios, it’s going to be a better environment for them, because our nurses — even before the pandemic, but my God during that pandemic — they suffered. They worked so hard. They saw such death and devastation — and they just kept showing up.”


THE CITY is an independent, nonprofit news outlet dedicated to hard-hitting reporting that serves the people of New York.

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