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Solano County, California

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Good benefits overshadowed by toxic leadership - Senior IT Analyst Solano County, California Employee Review

1.0
Jul 12, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The benefits are good overall

Cons

Department of Information Technology leadership are toxic. Even if you're a great performer, if they don't like you for some personal reason. your position will get eliminated by "reorganization" method. It doesn't matter who you are. It doesn't matter how long you've been working there. It doesn't matter if the rest of the staff likes you for who you are and your work ethic. All shady stuff going on there. The CIO is leaving, the one below him must go.

Explore other reviews about Solano County, California

5.0
Oct 9, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

work life balance, nice co-workers

Cons

none was a great place

2.0
Dec 23, 2025
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Competitive benefits and job security. Some frontline staff are committed and attempt to do good work despite systemic barriers.

Cons

Clinical governance is fundamentally broken. The organization is not physician-led, yet physicians retain full clinical and legal responsibility for patient outcomes while lacking ultimate authority over care decisions. Medical judgment is routinely subordinated to administrative processes that are not grounded in medical training or accountability. Leadership roles are consistently occupied by individuals without adequate preparation in healthcare management or clinical governance. As a result, decisions affecting patient care, staffing, and risk management are often made without an understanding of clinical consequences. Highly trained physicians with relevant expertise are marginalized, while non-clinical priorities dominate. The environment rewards compliance over competence and tolerates mediocrity so long as coverage needs are met. This predictably drives away physicians accustomed to functional, physician-led systems, who tend not to remain long once the structural reality becomes clear. The resulting turnover appears chronic and self-perpetuating rather than transitional.

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