Fired Without Cause - Anonymous United Way Employee Review

1.0
Aug 3, 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

A few nice staff and decent benefits.

Cons

When fired I was told I was not the right fit. They gave me 3 weeks to learn everything and they were still not giving me full access to my job to see what I could do. Since they didn't give me a reason I'm not sure why I was fired. They also do not offer 15 minute paid breaks. Upper management was all jerks to me. I was interested in a conversation right next to me and he told me to turn around and leave us alone in a very rude way. When in orientation we were discussing insurance benefits and while I was looking over the information they told me look me in the eyes sternly. The staff is 90% women and they obviously favor towards it. They let women talk all they wanted and cut me off short. Very toxic environment I wouldn't recommend to my worst enemy.

Explore other reviews about United Way

5.0
Apr 10, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

People were very nice and cooperative

Cons

Not any that I would speak of

2.0
Jun 18, 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business Outlook

Pros

The mission is meaningful and the work itself can be deeply rewarding. Colleagues are talented, dedicated, and genuinely care about the community they serve. For the right person, that camaraderie carries a lot of weight.

Cons

Over the past two years, this organization has undergone significant and painful change. A revolving door of senior leadership, including the abrupt loss of key executives, created instability that trickled down to every level of staff. Layoffs followed, and then a steady stream of voluntary departures that leadership appeared either unable or unwilling to address meaningfully. Under new leadership, nearly every quality-of-life benefit that made nonprofit-level salaries feel worth it has been reduced or eliminated: fewer sick days, increased healthcare costs, loss of Summer Fridays, loss of Thanksgiving week, and a shift to more required in-office days. The cumulative effect is an organization that asks a great deal of its staff, in salary sacrifice and mission commitment, while systematically withdrawing what made that trade-off feel fair.

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