Total lack of communication and fluidity - EHS Specialist Onterris Employee Review

1.0
Jun 17, 2023
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Got to get my OSHA 30 and learn a lot about ergonomics.

Cons

This job was not what it was drawn out to be. I worked for their Orlando office after just moving to the area, and was hoping to get started with them as an environmental and health specialist long term. It was a complete joke with how unprepared they were and how unprepared I felt since day 1. I had no access to communication tools or basic resources for a couple of weeks. Forewarned- I told their recruiter from the beginning that I didn't have any sampling experience and I might now be a fit, but he still insisted on moving forward said that the team will properly train me to get me up to speed. Well guess what, they didn't. I had 4 days of shadowing then I was thrown out to the wolves. Orientation- There was no real orientation or introduction either. There was a 1 hour on boarding then that was it. No meeting or conversation with my manager or anyone else. Not even like a get to know you kind of thing. I didn't even know how to access the front door because I was never told-- if that shows you what level of break down there is there. Corporate- I think this has to do with the fact that corporate keeps eating up companies and not managing them. Half of the employees are on outlook and the other half on google. There is definitely a lack of cohesion because of it. It puts pressure on the managers and of course down to us. I didn't even have access to my work email on my phone because in order to do that I would've had to let the company to have access and see everything I do on it. Not right. Also the only thing that managers cared about was getting us billable instead of taking the time to train us properly. Disconnected team- My manager never comes in the office, and it doesn't feel like really anyone comes into the office, so there's a lack of chemistry and understanding of basic communication. During my first tour my manager didn't even know who some people were or how to get around the office, so, there's that. A normal conversation with my direct manager or anyone there was so infrequent. Lack of training- I had a client that was an hour and a half away and got 4 days training for when it definitely needed more. I even expressed this to them, and it got addressed briefly, but still never saw any kind of extra training, shadowing, or changes. I even got up one morning at 3:00am to shadow one of our team members for some type of sampling, and by the time I got there the guy had already finished the sampling so I never even got to learn what he did. Talk about a huge slap in the face to have me wake up that early, drive an hour and a half away, and then not do the one thing I was supposed to do there. Also, as part of my 30/60/90 day plan, they literally wrote in writing "Figure it out" as a goal. I was not set up for success in this role, this is not okay, and it's not what I signed up for.

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Onterris Response
2y
Please reach out Peter I’d like to help. Kevin Gill, SVP HR hrcorp@montrose-env.com

Explore other reviews about Onterris

5.0
Jun 25, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Company is highly adaptable. Maintains agility even though the company large. Upper management supports and encourages employee involvement.

Cons

Being a publicly traded company hinders some type of growth due to burdensome overhead.

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Onterris Response
4d
Thank you for the feedback and market advice. Kevin SVP Human Resources
1.0
Jun 18, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Prior to our company's acquisition with MEG/Onterris, the company had a strong culture, supportive leadership, and employees who genuinely cared about one another and the success of the business.

Cons

If your company has been acquired, pay close attention to employee reviews and take them seriously. I did, and many of the concerns raised turned out to be accurate. Employees were repeatedly assured that the acquisition would create new opportunities and that jobs were secure. In my experience, that was not the reality. Long-tenured employees were gradually pushed out while similar positions were later reposted with modified titles or responsibilities. The former ownership ultimately lost control of decisions despite assurances that little would change. Employees with years of institutional knowledge spent years implementing new procedures, documenting procedures, learning the new system, and navigating disorganized Workday implementations with minimal support. Much of the guidance consisted of being directed to read instructions on the intranet. If you are in a finance position they will let you go! They will tell you they want it all centralized in Arkansas but that's not true, there are plenty of people working remote but you will be pushed out no matter how long you've been with your company. This not only affected me but our entire team was wiped out. They didn't give us a heads up in advance to look for anything for 2 years we were told everyone was safe and I believed them. Keep an eye out for the constant restructuring of upper management as well.

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Onterris Response
4d
Thank you for a decade of contribution, and for sharing this so candidly. Change of this scale asks a lot of trust from employees, and we recognize that. We take feedback like yours seriously as we work to communicate more clearly through transitions and support the people navigating them. We'd genuinely value hearing more directly please contact our HR team at HRCorp@onterris.com so we can listen fully. Kevin Gill, SVP, HR
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