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Oregon Community Programs

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Reputation Management - Anonymous employee Oregon Community Programs Employee Review

2.0
14 May 2018
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Some nice people. Dog friendly environment. A varied experience depending on what your job title is. (If you’re admin, you get treated well, have stability and less pressure. VAST Improvement when new director was promoted.

Cons

Low pay. Notice that every positive review was written within a 1-week span of time and all say the same thing. This is called “reputation management” and something to be skeptical of!

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Oregon Community Programs Response
6y
Call us prejudice, but we think everyone employed at OCP is genuinely nice! We are fortunate that our collaborative culture brings an assortment of personalities that make a great mix to the OCP family. As a non-profit agency, we try to offer competitive pay and feel that our employee benefits package is exceptional. Benefits include comprehensive medical insurance, including dental and vision; paid holidays, sick and vacation time; employer retirement contributions; and more.

Explore other reviews about Oregon Community Programs

5.0
3 Oct 2022
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Provides excellent training for early-career therapists. Opportunity to work with high-need kids and families and see incredible impact. Very welcoming and caring environment.

Cons

I did not experience many cons in my role as an intern. Working with this population can provide unique challenges and it is helpful to consider whether that fits your skills and interests.

2.0
23 Mar 2016
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Individual offices. Dog friendly environment. Positive research-supported work helping families, as long as the referrals are appropriate. Some minor changes based on feedback get made.

Cons

The title "turnover city" should be enough said, as it hints to the many widespread problems. They don't care about the turnover despite being told over and over they are causing it. They exhaust people, then can't keep them around, so then they raise the amount of money that the few remaining moneymakers (less than 10 people) need to bring in for the whole agency (not the program) to survive. They only have those expectations of certain employees; others skate on the work of the few. You are replaceable. They say to your face not to work so hard that you lose sleep, but then if you don't, they will - get this - CUT your salary. They already pay a masters level employee only slightly more than the proposed new minimum wage - 15.50/ hr - & yet they still somehow feel that reducing that low of a salary is acceptable. Local grads will not work here, so they rely solely on hiring recent grads from out of town or out of state. Their board of directors is hidden (why? What's the big secret?) and supposedly they are the ones who voted to freeze wage increases. So, no raises. For more, see reviews for Kairos, a similar agency in Grants Pass, OR. These two agencies have similar problems.

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