Pros
Wage is more livable than other non-profits. Good cause. Lots of support back in its heyday. Seeing a direct positive impact on clients' lives makes the work fulfilling.
Cons
Worked several roles here. Organization-wide, I would also note a lack of stability. Every few months, people get switched to new departments or team. It's hard to gain any traction as an org if things are constantly being moved around. If you become a TA at this place, you will be set up to fail. Here's why: -Heavy case load with no work-life balance-- numbers are prioritized over more vulnerable clients that require more time and effort. -Management measures your weekly success by the amount of work ANOTHER department does. This measurement impacts whether or not your contract is renewed. -TA's are required to work in the office and at court clinics a few times a week and take on walk-ins, which take them away from their case load. Other departments could easily do that work. (At one point, I worked in another department where I essentially had nothing to do, and I would have gladly taken that work off the TA's hands). -Mandatory fun events and unnecessary four-hour long meetings also take time away from case work. -CEDP goes through cycles: they lay off several advocates at a time just to hire a whole new cohort that need to be trained. When funding contracts run out, the lowest performing TA's (aka, newest) get the ax-- and the cycle repeats. This keeps the team from being effective. -Constantly changing rules in state funding that can happen even halfway through a case, making it no longer workable. -Poor communication regarding management change. -Upper management shows where micromanagement meets lack of support.