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YAI - Seeing beyond disability

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YAI - Seeing beyond disability Reviews

3.0

45% would recommend to a friend

(634 total reviews)

Gary Milchman

60% approve of CEO

38% positive business outlook

YAI - Seeing beyond disability has an employee rating of 3.0 out of 5 stars, based on 634 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The YAI - Seeing beyond disability employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Non-profit and NGO industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

634 reviews
4.0
20 Aug 2008
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

YAI is a stable, ethical non-profit that does great work to empower and serve a vulnerable population. Even on bad days, I always agree with the mission. YAI pays very well in comparison to similar nonprofits and the benefit package can't be beat. We have excellent health insurance THAT IS COMPLETELY FREE for us. Premiums for dependents are very reasonable. Very flexible vacation and persona times, lots of employee recognition, tuition reimbursement, trainings and good supervision schedules. You always know how your supervisor feels about your performance. Lots of job security. They don't lay people off. YAI passes every government audit with flying colors, so we know that no shady bookkeeping is at work. That's a good feeling--would hate for all our hard work to be sabotaged by greedy accountants.

Cons

Nepotism counts for more than skills at YAI. Unqualified people are promoted out of loyalty--meaning the place is run by incompetent directors who have amazing, dedicated staff who make them look great. On the upside, I think most of them realize that this is the case and give credit where credit is due--most of the time. But, important decisions are usually made by people with the least knowledge of what is going on at any given time. Direct service staff, while highly valued and appreciated and paid more than government funding allots, are still underpaid and undervalued. Why do the people with the hardest jobs always get paid the least?

3.0
28 Sept 2018

YAI cultural has changed but there is a disconnect.

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

-Free Benefits -Fellow Colleagues are cool

Cons

-Co-Pays are kinda high. -Some of the Rewards are the same. No Changes -YAI promotes this Person Centered Approach toward the people we serve. The same approach needs to apply toward the employees. Upper Leadership in all departments should re-attend the Management training. -George Contos is a very awkward person, in terms of YAI he appears to have a good business sense, but my pet fish has a better personality. He is not warm at all. I don't feel he has an open door policy, his office is closed 95% of the time. -

3.0
20 May 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Options for overtime, good learning experience, lots of training opportunities to learn a variety of skills on company time such as CPR/First aid, AMAP, defensive driving, and bare-minimum ABA standards, free/affordable benefits

Cons

People in higher positions who shouldn't be there (based on popularity contest standards), higher up staff ignorant to actual ABA practices making the goals set for adults impractical, unsuccessful, and unappealing to the individual (especially true for BIS staff), terrible pay for the amount of work.

Viewing 1 - 3 of 634 Reviews

Glassdoor has 675 YAI - Seeing beyond disability reviews submitted anonymously by YAI - Seeing beyond disability employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if YAI - Seeing beyond disability is right for you.