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Pew Charitable Trusts

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More Toxic Than Congress - Project Manager Pew Charitable Trusts Employee Review

1.0
17 Feb 2013
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Decent Benefits, Talented co-workers, looks good on resume

Cons

Believe what you read here and really think about whether you want to come work at Pew. The word is out on the street and the negative reviews are 100% true. So true that the president asked her IT and HR leadership “if they could just get rid of Glassdoor and make it go away.” People warned me not to work here, but I, of course, thought “every place has its dysfunction, right?” Pew however, is the craziest and meanest environment you will ever find yourself in. Don’t be seduced by the fact that Pew has a lot of resources and that, as a result, you can really make a difference. It’s not the case. You will not be able to navigate the heavy bureaucracy or erratic decision making in order to get your work done. And the president is so frugal that you will not be able to use the resources effectively to achieve your project goals. This is why so many ambitious and talented people leave. I started with a cohort of 15-20 people a couple of years ago and every single person that I started with (ranging from admins to directors) has quit. Trust me this is not atypical. Rebecca Rimel is only concerned with two things: her external reputation and the board. She has no regard for the program work or Pew’s mission and values. I can’t tell you the countless times that I have bore witness to the president forcing her staff to undertake wasteful and ineffective projects that are not strategic, at the expense of existing work. She makes emotional, last minute and ill-informed decisions, rather than fully evaluating the actual goals and costs of her proposed projects and ideas. And none of the senior leadership has the guts to stand up for their work or challenge these bad decisions because they are terrified of her. The president regularly and indiscriminately fires people, merges programs, spends large amounts of money on pet projects, cuts effective and high-performing portfolios all because she has trouble managing staff or erratically decides one day that she doesn’t like someone or a board approved piece of work. I guess it’s easier to waste the Trusts’ investment in good work and people, rather than learn how to be an effective and confident leader. Worst of all, the board is oblivious to everything because the president carefully orchestrates every communication and meeting. In addition, the president tries to force her staff and external partners into doing what she wants by relentlessly hounding people into submission (all while hypocritically preaching the Pew motto “to be polite and trust the people”). This has gotten so out of hand that Pew’s negative reputation now precedes it with stakeholders, policy makers and funders - to the point where prominent figures refuse to be in the same room with the Pew president or program leaders, key partners refuse to work with the institution and funders refuse to direct resources to our campaigns. This doesn’t even include the army of former employees who were/are so disgusted with Pew that they are out there telling people and organizations about what a terrible institution Pew is to work for and partner with. No wonder HR is having trouble recruiting good candidates. Don’t think that you can keep your head down and remove yourself from this craziness either. You can’t. The demoralizing management practices extend to senior management, by fostering a state where everyone is consumed with posturing for power and attention, and where a culture of “mean” is not only tolerated, but rewarded. I’ve never seen so many high-achieving, dedicated and passionate people be made to feel worthless and insecure. People are managed from their weaknesses and not their strengths. What’s even more ineffective is the fact that it takes forever to get your work approved. And everything has to be approved by the president, who requires a 4 week review time. This is for both planned and urgent/time sensitive projects that arise in the media or congress. Plus, the only way the president or any of her senior managers communicates is through memos, rather than conversation. If you have an idea or a concern, you have to put it in a memo that will then get edited by no less than five people before it can actually be sent to its intended audience. Lastly, instead of being the chief internal and external ambassador for Pew, Rebecca Rimel chooses to spend the majority of her time reviewing staff contracts, many for as little as $5,000 and obsessively scouring the various Pew websites. It’s not normal for a CEO to insist on spending 95% of their time signing every contract and every letter that gets sent out (every single one) instead of being out and about on behalf of the institution. This is just the tip of the iceberg. Please take this small purview into the insane world of Pew seriously and spare yourself the worst career decision that you will ever make. Stay where you are or go somewhere else – just don’t come work for Pew.

Explore other reviews about Pew Charitable Trusts

5.0
22 Jun 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Great and positive work environment, talented colleagues, flexibility and work life balance

Cons

Slow moving and risk averse

2.0
9 Feb 2026
Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Pew offers meaningful opportunities to work on important policy issues, and it has strong resources to support that work. Many colleagues are highly intelligent, capable, and deeply committed to the mission. For people early in their careers or those looking to gain exposure to public policy and research-driven advocacy, Pew can be a valuable place to learn (but not necessarily grow). Benefits are excellent as well.

Cons

The workplace culture is deeply affected by favoritism—advancement and recognition often go to a small, preferred group rather than being based on merit or impact. Rigid processes, layered hierarchy, and risk-averse decision-making make it difficult to innovate or achieve meaningful success. DEI efforts often feel more performative than substantive, with initiatives being quietly diluted or “whitewashed” to avoid political risk under the current administration. While there is a great deal of talent within the organization, the institution as a whole lacks ambition and is often unwilling to push boldly for change. The work environment can be toxic, with sexual and verbal harassment toward younger staff, pervasive microaggressions against people of color, and routine ageist comments. HR does not adequately protect those impacted and instead appears focused on minimizing risk and protecting leadership.

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