Press Release
MarinHealth Medical Center nurses announce one-day strike for safe staffing and patient safety
Nurses at MarinHealth Medical Center in Greenbrae, Calif., gave notice to their employer today that they will hold a strike for one day on Wednesday, Feb. 18, to protest the administration’s refusal to address RNs’ deep concerns about nurse retention, patient care, and safe staffing. The nurses are represented by California Nurses Association/National Nurses United (CNA/NNU).
CNA represents more than 700 nurses MarinHealth Medical Center. This strike notice, which lets the hospital make alternative plans for patient care, follows the nurses’ nearly unanimous strike authorization vote on Jan. 30. The nurses have been in contract negotiations since June 2025 with little to no movement on key issues.
“We always want to give our patients the best care but it is challenging to do that when we are stretched too thin and can’t take breaks during our 12-hour shift,” said Lynn Warner, RN in the progressive and metabolic care unit at MarinHealth. “We need more resource nurses to ensure patient and nurse safety. We are striking to demand that MarinHealth invest in nurse retention. so we will continue to give our community the care they deserve.”
Who: Registered nurses at MarinHealth Medical Center
What: One-day strike for patient safety and a fair contract
When: Wednesday, Feb. 18, 7 a.m. to Thursday, Feb. 19, 6:59 a.m.
Where: MarinHealth Medical Center, 250 Bon Air Rd, Greenbrae, Calif.
The RNs urge management to invest in nursing staff and agree to a contract that provides appropriate staffing so nurses can take proper meal and rest breaks, improvements to address recruitment and retention, and affordable health care.
“MarinHealth nurses love their jobs. We are really dedicated to our patients and our community,” said Krystle Davis, RN in the emergency department at MarinHealth. “Safe staffing and maintaining our health benefits is the key to retaining and recruiting nurses.”
The nurses held an informational picket in December but management has not addressed the patient safety concerns raised by nurses in their proposals.
California Nurses Association/National Nurses United is the largest and fastest-growing union and professional association of registered nurses in the nation with more than 100,000 members in more than 200 facilities throughout California and more than 225,000 RNs nationwide.