My experience at BECU the last 3 years reflected patterns of toxic leadership and organizational dysfunction that extended beyond isolated management issues and appeared embedded in the broader culture.
Key concerns included:
Abusive and fear-based leadership behaviors
Leadership was experienced as controlling, retaliatory, and at times psychologically harmful. Employees who raised concerns, questioned decisions, or challenged treatment often feared professional consequences, including exclusion, loss of opportunity, or separation.
Suppression of employee concerns
Rather than concerns being addressed through trusted internal channels, there was a pattern of employees feeling discouraged from speaking up. Formal systems that should have supported feedback or escalation were perceived as ineffective or unsafe. In some cases, employees believed raising concerns led to pushback rather than protection.
HR and governance failures
There was a perception that Human Resources functioned more to protect leadership and mitigate organizational risk than to impartially address employee harm. Concerns about governance and accountability, including whether appropriate oversight existed for executive behavior, contributed to a broader lack of trust.
Retaliation and silence through power imbalance
Many employees appeared to feel constrained by legal agreements, fear of reputational harm, or economic pressure, creating a dynamic where people stayed silent or exited rather than risk challenging leadership conduct. That kind of imbalance can allow harmful behavior to persist.
Disconnect between values and lived experience
There was a significant gap between the organization’s external brand — community-focused, people-centered, values-driven — and the internal experience described by employees. That disconnect made the harm feel more disorienting, because stated values did not consistently align with behavior.
Pattern recognition, not isolated incidents
A core concern was that these were not framed as one-off personality conflicts, but as repeated patterns reported across multiple individuals and over time. That distinction matters, because repeated patterns point to cultural and structural issues, not interpersonal misunderstandings.
Impact on employees
The effects included anxiety, diminished trust, professional harm, emotional strain, and in some cases people seeking legal counsel or leaving the organization. For many, the issue was not simply a difficult workplace, but harm resulting from leadership behavior and failed accountability systems.
Underlying issue: accountability
At its core, the concern is not about criticizing individuals for its own sake. It is about the absence of accountability when leadership behavior causes harm, and the risk that without structural checks, those patterns continue.
Accountability systems that protected power
HR and governance structures often appeared more effective at insulating leadership than addressing harm. When accountability protects power instead of people, dysfunction becomes structural.
Governance concerns, including CEO presence on the Board
A significant concern is the governance structure itself. The CEO should not serve on the Board of Directors of BECU. The Board’s role is to independently oversee management, including executive performance, strategic decisions, and risk. When the CEO participates in that oversight structure, it raises concerns about conflicts of interest, weakens independence, and can undermine accountability.
Bottom line
The experience described was of a workplace where toxic leadership, fear, weak accountability, and cultural silence created conditions that many employees experienced as harmful. The concern is not simply that leadership was difficult, but that the system itself may have enabled and protected those dynamics.