
There are amazing people here. There are also some awful people and unfortunately, they are frequently in charge. Nursing & education are predominately female occupations but the leadership does not have an equal representation. Discrimination is innate & those w/ influence do/cannot acknowledge it.
Working remotely is the best part of this job.
We get to work remotely
brilliant, creative, helpful, and forgiving
People find ways to work around the inefficiencies of our leaders.
Most of the leaders are looking for ways to grow as individuals. They support others' aspirations for personal and professional growth.
Compensation is below market. The health insurance is garbage. The VP of HR does nothing to improve these things and lets the managers in HR take the blame for it.
The compensation is far below market avg. Leaders say people are unhappy w/ their comp b/c they don't understand how it's calculated & they want to make more $. Pay more than 40% of the market.
The compensation and benefits need to improve. Women and POC aren't represented in leadership in proportion to the organization. The VP of HR receives awards but never does anything real. The CEO is too emotional but tells everyone else to make data-driven decisions. Huge egos with the exectutives.
The HR team. The BPs don't know what they are talking about with legal requirements. The whole team sends mixed messages. The vp doesn't engage when he's needed. The ops takes too long to respond. The recruiting mngr doesn't follow through. The CEO says one thing & HR does/says another. Catastrophe.
Compensation needs to be more competitive with the market. The benefits need to improve - our health insurance is a joke. There needs to be women and POC in the executive team. There's a few women but it's obvious they don't have a voice, It's evident from townhalls when they are shot down publicly.