Generally pleasant - Anonymous employee ORAU Employee Review

3.0
28 June 2016
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Employees are quite knowledgeable and forthcoming, as well as friendly. This is a well-educated, experienced bunch of people. ORISE does great work in the placement of young, recently-graduated M.S. and Ph.D. degreed people in research positions that will advance their careers. Pay is good. Diversity is the name of the game. As an example, ORAU sets itself apart from the private sector as one of the few organizations left that does not practice covert age discrimination in the hiring process.

Cons

Upper management is primarily comprised of baby-boomer lifers, who in the salient words of Douglas Coupland, are “rusting above” everyone else. Not only is there obfuscation of business motives by the “power mist,” there is also the rather dysfunctional administration support (namely the cumbersome HR fiefdom), groaning with resistance to implementation of 21st century business management practices which would slash the bloated overhead. The end result is wasteful duplication of effort and the inefficient use of valuable talent at the organization’s fingertips – as everyone desperately protects their little shred of turf from the appearance of irrelevancy.

Explore other reviews about ORAU

5.0
15 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Good contract work with the EPA

Cons

Contract got cut earlier than planned

1.0
3 June 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The pros heavily depend on your host facility, program manager and mentor. My mentor is great and allows me lots of freedom to do my work and develop my skills. Depending on your host facility you get to work with federal agencies and potentially get connections for a permanent job.

Cons

We are considered not employed, but a "participant in a program". Our salary is a taxable income. There is no benefits other than an offered health insurance that costs hundreds each month out of your salary for minimal coverage. There is no PTO. You have to ask permission if you want to take a day off or go on a trip. Any problems with the management goes unnoticed and you get told by ORISE to speak to the program manager even if they are the problem.

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