Pros
Thresholds provides excellent opportunities to learn and develop clinical skills. You work with a wide variety of individuals and situations, especially people experiencing psychotic symptoms, which creates a strong learning environment for new social workers, interns, and behavioral health professionals. The work itself is meaningful. Helping people feel heard, supported, and connected to solutions is rewarding, and there are many opportunities to gain experience with different populations and mental health conditions.
Benefits are generally good, including PTO, sick time, and insurance. Many coworkers are supportive, and concerns are usually heard when raised. Some managers are also genuinely down-to-earth people who do their best to protect staff from poor decisions coming from higher levels of the organization.
Kontras
The biggest issue is the corporate culture within upper management. There are too many layers of management, and it often feels like metrics, numbers, and organizational goals are prioritized over client outcomes and worker sustainability. This can contribute to burnout and can make employees feel like they are being managed as metrics rather than as professionals.
Management quality varies significantly. Some supervisors treat employees like human beings and advocate for them, while others seem heavily invested in corporate structures and protocols. Mistakes are sometimes handled appropriately and supportively, but consequences can also feel inconsistent depending on leadership.
Pay fairness also varies considerably by position. Some roles are compensated appropriately, while others are not. It is difficult not to notice how much organizational resources appear to be concentrated at upper management levels.