You won't find a cleaner gas station! - Anonymous employee Chevron Employee Review

4.0
Jun 29, 2010
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

This is one of the cleanest gas stations that I have ever been in. The customers are all locals and for the most part they are nice and watch out for you. The boss is very hands off, but he expects you to do your work. They pay better at Goldenrod Chevron than most stations.

Cons

The management is not considerate of third shifts duties and responsibilities. Management treats first and second shift employees better than the rest because he spends time with them. There is a lot of work to do because it is only a single owner station. There are only 4 employees at a time so there is no calling in sick. No benefits. No vacation pay. Lots of duties.

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5.0
Mar 13, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Friendly and helpful. Good people

Cons

People are very competitive and nervous about their job

2.0
Jun 19, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Paychecks still hit when expected.

Cons

The recent restructuring has fundamentally weakened how the organization operates. Critical workflows that once relied on cross‑functional alignment are now slowed by fragmentation, unclear ownership, and constant handoffs. The company is asking for the same performance with significantly fewer resources and far less structural support. Employee trust has taken a noticeable hit. Messaging from leadership remains upbeat, but it rarely reflects the day‑to‑day reality employees are navigating. The gap between what is said and what is experienced has grown wide enough that many people no longer feel their concerns are being acknowledged, let alone addressed. Workload pressure has intensified across the board. Teams are stretched thin, managers are overwhelmed, and the pace of change has outstripped the systems needed to support it. The result is an environment where people are doing their best despite the structure, not because of it. Chevron has historically been known for stability, collaboration, and thoughtful decision‑making. Those strengths are much harder to see in the current setup. There is still a path back to a healthier culture, but it will require leadership to confront the consequences of the reorganization directly and rebuild transparency, alignment, and trust.

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