Pros
* The clients and frontline staff are genuinely the best part of the organization. Many coworkers are deeply compassionate, skilled, and committed despite difficult working conditions.
* Strong exposure to crisis work, assessment, triage, and community mental health systems.
* Fast-paced environment that can build clinical confidence and crisis management skills quickly.
* Opportunities to collaborate with nurses, security staff, case managers, and therapists across multiple levels of care.
* Leadership opportunities sometimes arise organically for staff willing to step up during high-acuity situations.
* Important mission serving high-need and underserved populations.
Cons
* Burnout and staffing shortages significantly impact morale and workflow.
* Communication between leadership, supervisors, and frontline staff can feel inconsistent or unclear.
* High expectations are often placed on staff without equivalent support, compensation, or operational structure.
* Frequent crisis-mode functioning can make long-term sustainability difficult.
* Staff who are highly capable may end up taking on additional responsibilities informally without recognition or title adjustments.
* Turnover can affect continuity, training, and team cohesion.