VERGE OF LOSING CONTRACT - Correctional Monitor The Salvation Army Employee Review

2.0
4 Oct 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Paid sick days, paid holidays, and vacation, benefits

Cons

Absolutely horrible place and no management within the building with over 250 residents. Supervisors especially 4-12 shift do not care about how many people are there to help work and will leave you in the building while constantly trying to avoid any major situations that come about. They do not care about staff and will leave to people alot of time 2 females in a building with over 200 males. They are on the verge of losing their contract at the moment and mostly are hiring through a 3rd party temp agency. 3 people have left from the top and now it's really unsafe especially if you are working night shift there. They rarely report situations to BOP and the head of security there is non existent and seems to just be there for show! Do not be fooled by the good benefits this place is not worth it, been there long enough to know now.

Explore other reviews about The Salvation Army

5.0
7 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Loved being part of the mission to help anyone in need. Everyone was great to work with and it was such an encouraging environment.

Cons

Lots of long and outdated internal processes.

1
1.0
23 Apr 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Staff (not management) genuinely cared about the people they were serving

Cons

People are always shocked when I tell them about the morally corrupt (not to mention, illegal!) things that happened in our Denver office on a regular basis. The only thing worse than management's toxic and discriminatory behavior, was how HR enabled it. I can speak to 4 different incidents where an employee went to HR with DOCUMENTED PROOF of sexual harassment, sexual misconduct, discrimination, and/or retaliation from management. HR never opened an official investigation into any of those complaints, forcing the employees to return to an even more toxic work environment, because the managers were allowed to see the entirety of what the employee had submitted to HR. They were then able to turn around and write up that same employee for phony or nonexistent issues. The employee couldn't contest it or do anything to challenge its legitimacy. And once they received 3 or 4 of those written warnings, they were eligible for termination, which is exactly what happened. HR forced 2 of the aforementioned employees to write a resignation letter. The other 2 were let go under the guise of "budget cuts." All of the managers named in those complaints still work there today, and never received so much as a written warning.

2
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