April 15, 2026

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Strike by 950 nurses in Madison, Wisconsin over workplace safety and wages

Strike by 950 nurses in Madison, Wisconsin over workplace safety and wages
Striking nurses in Madison, Wisconsin, May 27, 2025 [Photo: SEIU Wisconsin via X/Twitter]

On Tuesday, 950 nurses employed by UnityPoint Health-Meriter Hospital in Madison, Wisconsin, launched a five-day strike, the first by nurses at the hospital. They are demanding improvements in workplace safety for both staff and patients, higher staffing ratios and increased pay. 

Striking nurse Audrey Willems Van Dijk, speaking at a press conference launching the strike, said, “We have been stretched a little bit more thin, we have worked a little bit harder, we are constantly staying extra to help our coworkers and our patients, and it feels like management is taking advantage of our love of our job.” 

The striking nurses are members of the Wisconsin chapter of Service Employees International Union or SEIU Wisconsin, whose membership comprises approximately 7,000 healthcare and service industry workers in the state.

The fact that the Meriter strike is occurring in Madison is significant. Act 10, passed over a decade ago through tactics of questionable legality under former Governor Scott Walker, stripped collective bargaining rights from nurses at UW Health in Madison. That law sparked mass working class protests at the state Capitol building, and broad support for a statewide general strike against the bill.

These nurses currently have a case before the Wisconsin Supreme Court to force the health system to recognize their union. In addition, SEIU Wisconsin is a plaintiff in a separate lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of Act 10. Last year, a judge ruled parts of the law unconstitutional, although an appeal is still pending.

The strike also takes place amid numerous struggles of healthcare workers nationally.

Eight hundred workers at Butler Hospital in Providence, Rhode Island, have been on strike since May 15th. The SEIU announced Wednesday that it was returning to the bargaining table. New York-Presbyterian Hospital also has announced plans to lay off 1,000 workers earlier this month.

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