Affordable Hospitals Campaign

Steven Corwin, President and CEO, New York Presbyterian; Kenneth Davis, President and CEO, Mt Sinai Health Systems; Michael Dowling, President and CEO, Northwell Health; Robert Grossman, Dean and CEO, NYU Langone Health, and Philip Ozuah, President and

Sisters and Brothers,

We need your help to win our fair share of federal funding for NYC public hospitals.
Please sign this petition to support quality and affordable healthcare for all New Yorkers. We need your help to send this petition to the heads of the five major, private hospital networks in New York, who have a unique level of power and control over the affordability of healthcare available in our city.
• Private hospitals take the lion’s share of government funds like Medicare, which leaves significantly less funds to pay for the important public services that DC 37 members provide.
• Hospital costs in the New York area are among the highest in the nation.
• Private hospitals charge an average of 302% of the Medicare reimbursement rate, that’s over 3X more for the same procedures as NYC Health +Hospitals.
• Higher costs does not result in better quality care.
• Moreover, New York’s private hospitals often refuse to care for homeless, poor and uninsured individuals, dumping them on NYC H+H, the City’s public healthcare system.
These practices are hurting working families and stifling workers' wages. They hurt us and are unacceptable.
Please stand together for our fair share. Demand a seat at the table with New York’s major private hospitals. Help your union by signing this petition by Feb. 5, 7 PM.
Please share this message now with your co-workers, friends and family and on social media. Thank you for your help on this important issue and please be sure to respond by Feb. 5, 7PM.

In solidarity,

Henry Garrido, DC 37 Executive Director
Sponsored by

To: Steven Corwin, President and CEO, New York Presbyterian; Kenneth Davis, President and CEO, Mt Sinai Health Systems; Michael Dowling, President and CEO, Northwell Health; Robert Grossman, Dean and CEO, NYU Langone Health, and Philip Ozuah, President and
From: [Your Name]

​As the heads of the five major, private hospital networks in New York, you have a unique level of power over the quality and affordability of healthcare available to New Yorkers.

As healthcare costs continue to rise, more and more working New York families are struggling to maintain their health care and make ends meet. Hospital costs in the New York metro area are among the highest in the country, and spending is continuing to grow more rapidly than the national average. A Rand study conducted in 2020 found that New York hospitals in 2018 charged an average of 302% of the Medicare reimbursement rate for the same procedures. Numerous studies have found that higher hospital pricing does not directly correlate to a higher quality of care.

The high prices that your hospitals charge are hurting working families. Every dollar that goes towards costs is one less dollar that could have gone to wages for workers, and, in the case of government spending, to fund important public services.

We call on you to take immediate action to come to the table in good faith with the city, state, and self-insured health funds and agree to fair, transparent contracts with equitable and affordable prices.