New York City Unions Secure Historic Wage Gains
Hotel housekeepers, commuter rail workers, and nurses are among the unionized workers notching major pay increases across New York City — a wave of labor victories that reflects both the city's soaring cost of living and a political climate unusually favorable to organized workers.
Hotel housekeepers won a contract this week that will bring their wages to six figures within a few years. Long Island Rail Road workers, who already averaged more than $135,000 annually, ended a three-day strike — the railroad's first in three decades — after securing additional raises. Doormen and hospital nurses reached similar agreements earlier this year.
The deals underscore organized labor's unusual strength in a city where the cost of living is a constant preoccupation and elected officials openly align themselves with union causes. Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who won office on a platform of taxing the wealthy and championing working-class residents, walked picket lines with nurses and addressed a May Day rally. "We have to make it easier to raise a family in New York City," he said.
Business groups warn that the gains will ripple through to consumers — higher hotel rates, steeper healthcare costs, and pressure on public transit fares. The Metropolitan Transportation Authority argued during LIRR negotiations that the union's demands would force fare hikes or more borrowing.
The economic backdrop makes the stakes clear. Median asking rent in New York hit a record $4,120 a month in April, up 7% from a year prior. Annual daycare costs average $26,000 — a 43% increase since 2019. Even nurses earning $140,000 a year describe the strain of everyday expenses. "Things are very expensive, extraordinarily expensive," said Flandersia Jones, a Bronx oncology nurse with more than four decades on the job.
The Hotel and Gaming Trades Council called its new agreement the union's largest pay increase in nearly a century, covering 30,000 workers at roughly 250 hotels. A housekeeper's hourly rate will climb from $39.87 to $61.07 by the contract's final year, crossing the $100,000 annual threshold by year six. The deal also preserves free family healthcare and introduces new funds to help workers with housing and childcare.
Apartment-building workers, including doormen, are reviewing a tentative agreement that would raise hourly wages by $4.50 by 2030, guarantee a 15% pension increase, and maintain free healthcare coverage.
Labor economists caution that New York's union victories may be difficult to replicate elsewhere, given the city's dense organizing infrastructure and sympathetic government. Still, national attitudes toward unions have shifted. Gallup found that 68% of Americans supported unions last year — up sharply from a low of 48% in 2009 — and strike activity, while still modest, has been rising.
Whether the momentum holds beyond New York may depend on whether other workers, watching these gains, decide the math is worth the fight.
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