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American Forests

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American Forests Reviews

3.0

40% would recommend to a friend

(20 total reviews)

50% positive business outlook

American Forests has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 20 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The American Forests employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Non-profit and NGO industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

20 reviews
4.0
23 Dec 2021

Heavy Work Load with Good Benefits

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Upstanding mission. - Minimum 12 paid vacation days per year. - Twelve paid sick days per year. - Eighteen days paid holiday. - Three hours of holiday pay every Friday between Memorial Day and Labor Day. - Health, dental and vision insurance. - Competitive salary. - Six percent matching retirement contribution. - Two thousand dollars professional development stipend. - Metro SmartBenefits® $50 per month. - Fifty dollar reimbursement toward monthly work phone bill. - Holiday gift basket. - Sabbatical opportunity after 7 years. - Flexible working hours. - Talented staff. - Considerate team members. - National professional network. - Moderate care for physical wellness. (e.g. standing desks and coronavirus protection policies) - Diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility (DEIA) aware. (e.g. increasingly diverse staff and Board of Directors) - Full-time remote work for employees based outside of the DMV and two days remote work permitted for staff residing in the D.C. area.

Cons

- Though salaried, heavy workloads across the organization result in staff working consistently in excess of 40 hours, working during paid holidays, not taking paid vacation or working during vacation, working through illness and injury, working through sabbatical time, not using compensatory time, and rejecting professional development and networking opportunities. - Although not policy, the organization’s national scope creates an environment where staff member’s work hours expand to accommodate U.S. financial donors and constituent’s time zones. Some staff feel the need to always be available, or “always on”. As a result, staff send emails, text messages, and make phone calls during most hours of the day. - The work pace is fast, the deadlines are short, and the performance expectations are high while managing multiple projects. - Aside from paid outside contractors, the organization has no full-time or part-time support staff. There are no coordinators, assistants, apprentices, interns, or formal volunteer positions. - Adhocracy and “we’ll sleep when we’re dead” work culture. - Frequent shifting of staff roles and responsibilities. - No paid leave for parents or caregivers. - Racial and gender microaggressions. - No persons of color in the executive leadership team. - No pay transparency. - No anti-retaliation or whistleblower policy. - New benefits and organizational policy changes are not put in writing and are not easily accessible for new or seasoned staff. - In practice, the organization places the greatest value, emphasis, and investment of time into the financial donor’s experience versus the nonprofit’s impact on communities and the environment.

3.0
1 Sept 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great team collaboration. Smart colleagues who care about enviro issues and respect each other's work efforts and personal boundaries. Very good benefits package.

Cons

The company has reorganized it leadership team twice in the last 9 months, with questionable leadership choices leaving staff to feel great sense of unease. It is common for there to be staff capacity issues in a not-for-profit - however, this has been going on for years, invalidating the "work/life balance" the leadership says they support. There's only so much stress people can take. I used to recommend to friends and colleagues as a great place to work, but I no longer do this.

3.0
3 Nov 2020

Great mission, so-so benefits, no work-life balance

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

American Forests has done a huge about-face in the last year. It's now on the cutting edge of forest conservation, with a big emphasis on climate change. The organization is growing quickly, and amazingly hasn't experienced any pandemic-related drop off of funding. Because of this, American Forests is often a genuinely exciting and interesting place to work. Most people are passionate, kind and willing to help.

Cons

Because American Forests is growing quickly, the workload can be ruinous. Staff routinely work 11, 12 and more hour days, for weeks on end. There is a lot of lip service given to work-life balance (Summer Fridays, technically a 7.5 hour working day) but few people are able to take advantage of these benefits. Working at American Forests is particularly hard for parents. Pay lags a bit compared to other nonprofits. The benefits lag a lot compared to other nonprofits.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 20 Reviews

Glassdoor has 26 American Forests reviews submitted anonymously by American Forests employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if American Forests is right for you.