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Tutor Perini Corporation

Engaged Employer

Rudolph & Sletten Decline Since Perini Purchase - Project Manager Tutor Perini Corporation Employee Review

2.0
Sep 2, 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

With the recession, R&S staff stuck around longer than they likely would have once the direction of the company became clear after the purchase by Perini.

Cons

Decline in benefits Stagnant salaries Inability to compete for projects we were previously the frontrunner for due to the reputation of our parent company Loss of key staff R&S had an extremely successful business model that has essentially been sucked dry by the parent company. Many of the employees with strong resumes that allowed us to successfully compete in the tech industry have now left and gone to our key competitors.

Explore other reviews about Tutor Perini Corporation

5.0
Mar 3, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nice people, Know how to build working as team and support individual

Cons

didn't have clear vision to future jobs in New York

1
1.0
Mar 18, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

Nothing that I can think of

Cons

The working conditions on the HART project are extremely unhealthy and feel deliberately unsustainable. Long and exhausting days—often exceeding 11 hours—are treated as standard, and Saturday work is expected without question. There are no true holidays, only two floating days for the entire year, making work‑life balance nearly impossible. Leadership is disorganized, unresponsive, and difficult to work with. Instead of providing guidance, new employees are left to navigate everything on their own. When questions arise, the default response is to “search the cloud” or “read the plans,” even when the information is outdated, incomplete, or nearly impossible to locate. This creates a culture where employees are set up to fail from the start. Work is assigned with urgency, yet reviews are delayed for days or even weeks. After completing tasks without timely feedback, employees often receive pages of comments requiring major revisions—revisions that could have been avoided had leadership reviewed the work earlier or answered questions when asked. This cycle repeats constantly and erodes morale. Engineers are expected to use AutoCAD, but the computers provided cannot run the software effectively, resulting in frequent delays and unnecessary frustration. The offboarding process is equally unprofessional. Even when employees submit a proper two‑week notice, management may instruct them to leave earlier than their stated end date. Accrued PTO and sick leave are not paid out or handled transparently, leaving departing employees feeling dismissed and disrespected. Overall, the environment is stressful, chaotic, and deeply discouraging. Employees are treated as replaceable rather than valued. Anyone considering this project should be fully aware of how damaging the experience can be.

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