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Dayton Metro Library

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Dayton Metro Library Reviews

3.2

57% would recommend to a friend

(33 total reviews)

42% positive business outlook

Dayton Metro Library has an employee rating of 3.2 out of 5 stars, based on 33 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The Dayton Metro Library employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Government and public administration industry (3.6 stars).

Reviews by job title

33 reviews
1.0
2 July 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Potentially great coworkers, depending on the location.

Cons

This organization is run by a toxic administration that has only gotten worse under the current leadership. If you bring any concerns to their attention, they will lie and gaslight you instead of fixing or improving anything. DML's initial response to the COVID pandemic was commendable, but steadily waned. Frontline staff received inconsistent support when confronted by abusive patrons, sometimes even getting blamed and punished for the abuse they received. To that end, a member of the administration lied about the existence of mask mandates even while we were under two (city and state) simultaneously. COVID protections gradually fell by the wayside until the administration made the ableist decision to lift mask requirements just as the Omicron variant was ramping up. Visitors were not required to mask during the entire Omicron wave, ensuring that the library was an unsafe space for the most vulnerable people in the community we are meant to serve. This is not too surprising, considering the agnotological approach to leadership within the organization's upper management. This is the same approach that led members of the library's administration to ignore repeated OSHA violations at several branches. Eventually, they issued a statement claiming that library employees are not covered by OSHA, but rather by an organization called PERRP. This is a lie of omission, as they conveniently left out the fact that enforcing OSHA standards for public employees is literally what PERRP does. All of this took a huge toll on my mental health. I had over a thousand hours of sick time saved up, so I tried to schedule a few mental health days. My manager had even suggested I do this. Shortly after I placed the request, I was told that I couldn't use sick time for mental health days, and would have to use vacation time instead. This review could go on for quite a while, so I'll just say this: Seek employment literally anywhere else.

3.0
21 Feb 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

HSA Plan/Contributions Opportunities For Creative Expression in Program Planning Professional Development and Opportunities to Join Committees Good Balance of Customer Service and Personal Time Can Listen to Music/Books During Down Time Tuition Reimbursement (not 100%, somewhere between 60-70%)

Cons

Benefits Package - High Deductible Poor Organizational Communication/Disorganized/Chaotic Incompetent and Corrupt Upper Management Fake Woke and Performative - Diversity is Not Represented in Hiring Underpayed Lack of Schedule Flexibility

3.0
24 June 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Get to help people every day and connect with the community. Excellent amount of paid + sick time. Good variety in day to day tasks. Union representation. Regular raises per our contract. Much better compensation than other area public libraries. A big enough system that you could get a lot of different experiences just within DML. Find your lane and keep your head down and you could be here 40 years if you wanted.

Cons

Experience varies based on your manager. C-suite admin are absolute airhead money-wasters that don't value front-line staff because they're too afraid to work a public service desk and see what we contribute. They often have a corporate mindset over a library/service mindset. But it's best when they're preoccupied with their special projects so they can stop thinking about cutting staff. Moving up is encouraged (and training is provided), but doesn't buy you any influence. Positions are invented for people they don't want to fire. When bringing up accessibility issues you will be told "maybe this isn't the right job for everyone." Lots of DEI talk but all of it for show. And the never-ending drama of being publicly funded isn't for everyone.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 33 Reviews

Glassdoor has 33 Dayton Metro Library reviews submitted anonymously by Dayton Metro Library employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if Dayton Metro Library is right for you.