April 15, 2026

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Minnesota Nurses Association ratifies contract for 15,000 nurses, leaving advanced providers strike isolated

Minnesota Nurses Association ratifies contract for 15,000 nurses, leaving advanced providers strike isolated
Minnesota nurses picket, September 12, 2022

The Minnesota Nurses Association (MNA) announced Tuesday that contracts had been ratified for roughly 15,000 nurses across major hospital systems in the Twin Cities and the Duluth-Superior region. The agreement covers nurses employed by Allina Health, Children’s Minnesota, Fairview, and Health Partners in the Twin Cities, and by Essentia Health and Aspirus Health’s St. Luke’s Hospital in the northeast of the state.

The contract ratification follows more than four months of closed-door talks between the MNA and hospital administrators. Nurses in the Twin Cities have been working without a contract since May 31. The MNA announced the tentative agreement with Twin Cities hospitals on July 3, days after Duluth-area nurses voted overwhelmingly to authorize a strike. The next day, the union called off the Duluth strike and quickly moved to finalize a second agreement.

Meanwhile, a separate strike by more than 500 Advanced Practice Providers (APPs) at Essentia Health hospitals in northeastern Minnesota and western Wisconsin remains ongoing. The APPs are nurse practitioners, midwives, physician assistants, and clinical nurse specialists. They joined the MNA last year and are now being isolated on the picket line by the union

The MNA bureaucracy worked to fragment and dissipate the growing anger among healthcare workers across the state. At no point were nurses across the different systems and job classifications unified in a common fight. The bureaucracy’s actions were aimed not at strengthening the struggle, but at limiting its political and economic impact.

Nurses had been prepared to fight. The strike votes were driven by years of chronic understaffing, stagnant pay, and unbearable working conditions. Yet the new contracts address none of the underlying problems. In the Twin Cities, nurses will receive a nominal 10 percent raise over three years. Nurses in Duluth and Superior are being given just 9.75 percent over the same period—well below the cumulative inflation rate since 2021, and entirely inadequate in light of present inflation.

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