employer cover photo
employer logo
employer logo

Texas Municipal Retirement System

Is this your company?

Avoid - Anonymous employee Texas Municipal Retirement System Employee Review

1.0
23 Feb 2024
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Most people are great to work with, hard workers, passionate, and smart. They do a good job of hiring quality people only to put them through the grinder and see many of them leave. Benefits are OK, not great. Beware locking yourself into the pension system and do a lot of research before you do. I'm not saying it's a bad pension but you have to know if it's for you because at some point leaving becomes harder due to how it's setup.

Cons

Where do I start: This place used to be pretty great until a new executive director was hired. It was not perfect, but people generally cared about each other and worked hard to provide good service to our members. He started four years ago and caused nothing but chaos and heartache. I have seen him yell at and demean people below him over the slightest of issues. My toddler had more self-control than this guy. Besides his personality flaws a culture of chaos has been created by him. The turnover is now atrocious, countless people gone. Every day is something new to focus on until the next day he has his team move onto something else. A good team of people has been hired who want to take challenges head-on and welcome change but nobody in the organization can get anything meaningful done because the goalposts move all the time. Our new focus is now doing everything we can to win awards. This is one of the rare goals that is actually sticking around. We're losing focus on our core mission to spend countless hours writing up documents and changing processes just to win some awards. We even hired a new executive whose sole focus is to win us awards. Why did we hire someone at $200,000 plus per year just to win stupid awards nobody cares about? Seems like not a smart way to spend our pension member's money. Seems like a vanity project for an executive director who is nearing retirement. The pay is subpar though some raises the past couple of years has helped it's still subpar. It's a small organization so not a lot of room to move. They are pushing for more return to office even though the building is located in an awful location with nothing around and it's just another soulless office building. The open floor plan means it's loud with a lot of distractions and I can't get anything done when I'm at the office yet even though I get more done at home they're asking us to go in more often. Moving from our old building was another dumb decision since it had more space and was quieter. Turnover is aggressive now. More and more people are getting fed up and the only reason to stick around is once you put in a certain amount of time the pension becomes the golden handcuffs. It has become toxic and nobody enjoys working there. Personally once my oldest is out of school very soon I'm running away fast. I've worked at a few private and public sector employers large and small and I have never seen morale this low anywhere.

Explore other reviews about Texas Municipal Retirement System

5.0
14 Aug 2024
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The hiring process was seamless and the leadership team has been so supportive.

Cons

I haven’t experienced anything negative

3.0
6 Mar 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

TMRS has a meaningful mission and it feels good knowing the work supports public employees and retirees across Texas. Work-life balance is genuinely good and the pace of work is slower compared to many private sector roles, which can be a nice change if you’re coming from a high-pressure environment. The benefits are solid and overall it’s a stable place to work.

Cons

Because the organization is relatively small and very tight-knit, the culture can sometimes feel a bit insular. At times it can feel a little like high school with interpersonal dynamics and internal drama. Being a government agency, things can also move slowly and processes can be more bureaucratic than what you might experience in the private sector.

See reviews by: Helpful|Rating|Date|All