Caring staff undervalued by disconnected leadership - Director ANDRUS Employee Review

1.0
11 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Nice location and accessible. Caring and hard working staff who are not very appreciated by the C-suite staff.

Cons

During my time at Andrus, I continue to observe a significant gap between the organization’s stated values and the way many decisions are made in practice. This inconsistency creates confusion, lowers morale, and makes it difficult for staff to perform their jobs effectively. Communication from senior leadership is often unclear, inconsistent, or absent. Staff are frequently expected to manage complex responsibilities with limited guidance, support, or direction. Important decisions are sometimes made without adequate transparency, leaving employees uncertain about priorities, expectations, and organizational goals. When leadership is not visible, accessible, or responsive, staff are left to navigate challenges on their own, which increases frustration and the likelihood of mistakes. There is also a widespread perception among staff that favoritism influences hiring decisions, promotions, housing benefits, and other opportunities within the organization. Whether this perception is fully accurate or not, leadership should recognize that perception itself matters. When employees believe personal relationships carry more weight than qualifications, experience, performance, or commitment to the mission, trust in leadership is undermined and morale suffers. The Human Resources department appears disconnected from the values the organization publicly promotes. HR should serve as a trusted, neutral, and transparent resource that ensures fairness, accountability, and consistency throughout the organization. Instead, many staff perceive HR as primarily protecting leadership interests rather than supporting employees or addressing concerns objectively. There is a need for significantly greater transparency regarding hiring practices, promotions, internal opportunities, compensation decisions, and organizational privileges. Staff deserve to understand how decisions are made and to feel confident that opportunities are awarded fairly and based on merit. When processes are unclear, employees may conclude that favoritism and personal relationships are valued more highly than competence, professionalism, and dedication. Staff are often held to standards that do not appear to be applied consistently across all levels of the organization. Employees are expected to comply with attendance policies, scheduling requirements, and accountability measures, while leadership is sometimes perceived as operating under a different set of expectations. This inconsistency creates resentment and contributes to a culture where staff feel undervalued and disconnected from leadership. The organization promotes the Sanctuary Model and trauma-responsive care, yet there appears to be limited recognition of the impact organizational stress, instability, uncertainty, and poor communication have on employees. Trauma-responsive care should not only guide interactions with children and families; it should also shape how leaders communicate, make decisions, manage change, and support staff. During periods of fiscal challenge, restructuring, or uncertainty, employees need clear communication, psychological safety, and visible leadership. Too often, the focus appears to be on maintaining appearances rather than fully embracing trauma-responsive principles throughout the organization. It is particularly concerning when individuals in the programs department without relevant clinical expertise make decisions that directly affect the treatment environment, program integrity, or the well-being of children and families. Organizations serving vulnerable populations must ensure that decisions affecting clinical care are informed by appropriate expertise and guided by the best interests of those receiving services. Program staff’s credentials should be audited and ensure area of expertise align with work. Many staff members demonstrate extraordinary dedication, professionalism, flexibility, and compassion. They show up every day to support children and families through crises, trauma, and significant life challenges. These employees deserve leadership that values their contributions, supports their development, communicates honestly, and treats them with respect. Instead, many employees report feeling unheard, unsupported, and unappreciated. The cumulative effect of these issues has damaged morale, weakened trust, increased turnover risk, and moved the organization further away from the values and mission it seeks to uphold. The agency has many talented and committed employees who genuinely care about the children and families they serve. Rebuilding trust will require leadership to engage in honest self-reflection and meaningful change.

Explore other reviews about ANDRUS

5.0
26 Oct 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Leaders are passionate and committed to the growth of individuals who serve our youth. Staff is caring and trained along the way to build on their skill set

Cons

Hard to teach staff that trauma work requires care and compassion sometimes.

1
1.0
21 May 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great health insurance, beautiful campus, wildlife, diversity.

Cons

During my time at this agency, I see a consistent disconnect between leadership decisions and the organization’s stated core values. This contradiction creates confusion and instability for staff, and it made mistakes more likely simply because the environment lacked clarity and support. Communication from upper leadership is often vague or inconsistent. While the agency is focused on addressing fiscal challenges, the approach has included undermining the very staff hired to improve fiscal integrity. This contradiction has been difficult to understand and has contributed to a sense of disorganization. The agency upholds the Sanctuary trauma‑informed model, yet there has been little acknowledgment of the collective disturbance and parallel processes that naturally arise during times of organizational stress. Optics often appear to be prioritized over genuine trauma‑informed practice, and it is discouraging to see individuals with no clinical background making decisions that directly affect the agency’s integrity and the well‑being of both staff and clients. Ethical and moral practices are meant to be modeled from the top. Instead, upper leadership has made decisions about the treatment of families and children without adequate regard for their clinical needs. Morality in a mental health setting includes supporting the staff who show up every day, manage crises, demonstrate care and concern for the children, and understand that good treatment requires flexibility and decisions rooted in the best clinical interests of the people served. These patterns have eroded morale and moved the organization further from its mission. Prospective employees may want to explore other opportunities where staff are valued and supported in the work they do.

3
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