Vantaggi
Working at Sandstone Care has been one of the most meaningful experiences of my life. I've been part of the team for over 4 months now, based out of Colorado Springs, and every single day I feel like I’m right where I’m meant to be. As a Peer Recovery Specialist and Case Manager, my role allows me to walk alongside clients in some of their most vulnerable moments and that’s an honor I don’t take lightly. Our team isn’t just a group of co-workers. We’re a family. From our incredible nurses and clinicians to our leadership and support staff, the culture here is rooted in compassion, collaboration, and showing up fully for one another. I’ve never once felt alone in this work we laugh together, we grow together, and we push through the hard days side by side. A day in my role is filled with client check-ins, helping navigate barriers to care, offering hope in moments of doubt, and being a steady presence for people fighting battles the world doesn't always see. It's emotionally rich and soul-deep work. And through it all, I’m supported, encouraged, and uplifted by a team that sees me. Being nominated for Employee of the Month felt surreal but what meant most was the kind words from my peers. At Sandstone, the love is real. If you’re someone who leads with heart, wants to be part of real change, and is looking for a workplace where you can grow both personally and professionally, this is your home.
Svantaggi
This is emotionally challenging work that can be very hard.
Vantaggi
Working here has been a really positive experience. The culture is welcoming and supportive, and there’s a genuine focus on work-life balance. Leadership encourages collaboration and creates an environment where people feel comfortable sharing ideas and growing professionally.
Svantaggi
I do not have any cons
Vantaggi
Clean work environment, lots of snacks, treats, gifts and celebrations with good food
Svantaggi
If you read just a handful of reviews and SSC's responses, you'll see canned corporate responses that are disconnected from what staff are actually experiencing day to day. Quoting industry averages and talking about “intentional structure” doesn’t change the reality that SSC employees feel overworked, unsupported, unheard, and emotionally drained. How can we effectively provide services to clients if we don't feel supported, valued, or have time for self-care? The problem is not a lack of understanding from employees — people understand the demands of this type of work. The problem is feeling unsupported by leadership while being expected to carry increasing emotional and operational burdens with little accountability or follow-through from management. The issue isn’t just the number of clients on paper— it’s the unrealistic expectations, emotional labor, administrative demands, poor communication, and lack of meaningful, REAL support when concerns are raised. Comparing Sandstone to “other behavioral health settings” also misses the point. Just because other places may be worse doesn’t mean the current environment is healthy or sustainable. What’s really frustrating is that feedback is constantly encouraged, but very little seems to actually change. Staff are told they’re valued and appreciated while continuing to experience toxicity, poor follow-through, and decisions that are driven by business priorities, rather than by the well-being of employees or clients. At a certain point, the supportive language starts to feel performative rather than genuine. People in this field are human beings, not productivity metrics. If Sandstone truly wants to “strengthen collaboration and feedback loops,” then leadership needs to spend less time writing polished responses and more time actively listening, taking accountability, and making concrete changes that staff can actually feel. Words without action are why morale continues to suffer. SSC won't be around in 2 years - mark my words.