ASPCA reviews

2.9

46% would recommend to a friend

(292 total reviews)

Matthew Bershadker

45% approve of CEO

44% positive business outlook

ASPCA has an employee rating of 2.9 out of 5 stars, based on 292 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have an average working experience there. The ASPCA employee rating is 22% below average for employers within the Nonprofit & NGO industry (3.7 stars).

Reviews by job title

292 reviews
2.0
Apr 1, 2015
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The organization does wonderful work to help animals.

Cons

The organization does not care for employees. HR favors management, HR is overwork and understaffed, CEO is a TRAINWRECK - visibly drunk at staff holiday party, rumored to be having relationships with coworkers, has his favorites who are promoted despite lack of experience or even doing a job well done.

2.0
Feb 4, 2015

Favoritism, terrible pay, decent benefits

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The organization has a great mission and is very helpful to animals. Pretty good health and time off benefits. There's always cute cuddly animals around.

Cons

Very low pay and it's easy to get let go. Open positions are always filled from outside the company and there's little room for growth, unless you're apart of a very small clique. Upper management is entitled and unappreciative of the efforts of the administrative staff.

2.0
Dec 5, 2014
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The positive aspect of working for the ASPCA is exactly what you'd expect it to be: working with animals, and feeling a deep sense of pride and accomplishment as you watch many of them transform from frightened and neglected/abused to loving pets. A con for some, but you want to take all the animals home! The benefits are also nice as a FT employee.

Cons

Sadly, I found the negatives outweighed the positives at The A. The salary as an Animal Care Tech makes it, without a doubt, impossible to pay rent in NYC; this causes the necessity for people to work double, triple and even more shifts in a row which leads to a stunning decrease in work ethic. Headquarter's location is the most inconvenient place in Manhattan, being on 92nd between 1st and York, and is at minimum, a 15 minute walk to the 456 train line (which is currently the only train on the east side). If you are a full-time employee, you earn paid time off for every hour you work; this seems fine, until you learn sick days are included in this, so if you get sick, you don't get time off. This causes sick people to come in anyway so that they don't lose their vacation time. The job is extremely high stress and very physically and emotionally tolling. 8-hour shifts are not really 8 hours, because before and after every shift, you must complete rounds; while this is necessary, it means you must stay late every day and you do not get paid for this time. If you work the 8am-4pm shift, you are blessed, as the 4pm-midnight, 4am-noon or midnight-8am shifts force you to be nocturnal, and prevent you from having any kind of life outside of the institution; commuting home at 12:30AM is not fun. Schedules are not at all flexible, and despite the fact that when offered the job, I was told there would be room for advancement quickly, I was denied every time I asked (and I'm positive they had no problem breaking my union contract). Lastly, and most importantly, the work environment among Animal Care Technicians is extremely toxic. The majority of the staff is Latino, and there are cliques based on racial and class lines. Gossip runs rampant. Employees speak Spanish to one another in group settings to talk gossip about those who don't speak the language. Management is rarely on the floor and so the only way your boss knows about your work is through your co-workers' feedback. In my personal experience, co-workers would be nice to my face and I would later hear them trash-talk me when they thought I wasn't around. As a result, my manager had a poor opinion of me, despite the fact that I felt I worked harder than all of my colleagues. It even reached levels of harassment and bullying--not just for me--although HR did not consider it to be. By the end of my time working at the ASPCA, I was so depressed and stressed out, I had lost 30lbs, I couldn't sleep, was breaking out with cystic acne, and hadn't seen family or friends in weeks. I am truly glad I no longer work there, and I wish I had known all of this before I had taken the job.

Viewing 268 - 270 of 292 Reviews

Glassdoor has 336 ASPCA reviews submitted anonymously by ASPCA employees. Read employee reviews and ratings on Glassdoor to decide if ASPCA is right for you.