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Erickson Senior Living

Engaged employer

"Class Action Lawsuit Waiting To Happen" - Anonymous employee Erickson Senior Living Employee Review

1.0
23 Oct 2015
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The best thing about Riderwood Village is its residents. They are wonderful and an absolute joy to be around each day!!!

Cons

The entire structure and overall management of this facility leaves a lot to be desired. The great and hard working employees are fired for the most rediculous reasons, while the lazy and inept employees remain. The management team currently in place are ineffective and a complete bunch of morons. This place is a class action lawsuit waiting to happen. They make up policies and procedures as they go along, and yet employees suffer the consequences because they are unable to keep on top of these ever changing policoes. Let me repeat myself ... Riderwood Village is a class action lawsuit waiting to happen!

Explore other reviews about Erickson Senior Living

5.0
28 May 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great team and family like structure

Cons

Depending on the location it could be very terrible.

3.0
30 Jun 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The residents are the best part of the job, and the friendships you build with your coworkers make the difficult days manageable. The floor staff genuinely care about one another and work together to provide the best care possible despite the challenges.

Cons

The company does not invest in its employees. Employee appreciation is almost always centered around food or an occasional company T-shirt rather than meaningful recognition. Management receives yearly bonuses while the staff providing direct resident care receive little in return. Employees have repeatedly been told that wages would be reviewed to better reflect the increasing cost of living, yet we are all still waiting. Long-term employees are often offered significantly lower wages than outside hires brought in for the same positions. Loyalty, experience, and dedication are not rewarded, making it difficult to encourage employees to build long-term careers here. Compensation also does not consistently reflect the expectations of different roles. Within healthcare, some units require substantially greater workloads, higher acuity, increased responsibility, and more complex patient care than others, yet the pay often fails to reflect those differences. Employees who are expected to carry the greatest responsibility should be compensated accordingly.

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