Pros
The volunteer support is truly overwhelming in the best way. Individuals who recognize a cause worth fighting for and show up, consistently, with heart and effort. The dedication of this community is the backbone of the organization. The staff is exceptional—some of the most hardworking, selfless people you will ever meet. It’s rare to find individuals who not only give everything of themselves to the job but also extend that same care to one another.
Cons
While animal welfare work is inherently demanding, the most labor-intensive component of being an employee at Lucky Dog is the constant need to emotionally regulate the CEO. Time and energy that should be dedicated to planning events, coordinating adoptions, recruiting volunteers, and supporting fosters is instead spent recovering from the ongoing condescension and degradation - ultimately resulting in an excessive staff turnover rate. Each position requires a "flexible, non-regular work week" creating an unsustainable expectation of constant availability. Staff and volunteers are routinely pushed beyond their limits, leading to widespread feelings of exploitation and lack of appreciation. Communication is either absent or deliberately controlled, making it remarkably inefficient and disempowering. In the rare instances where flexibility is exercised to adapt to the ever-changing and often chaotic nature of animal rescue, it appears to primarily serve the interests of the CEO, with minimal consideration given to input from staff or volunteers. All adoption decisions and animal considerations are controlled by the CEO, who—ironically—spends the least amount of time interacting with the animals or listening to the people providing firsthand feedback. The claim to “break down adoption barriers” is directly contradicted by this obsession with centralized authority as staff and volunteers are left advocating for individual animal's needs. Recommendation for working at Lucky Dog: Be prepared for a work environment where decisions are made impulsively by a CEO who is disconnected from daily operations but insists on controlling every detail. Don’t waste your energy trying to reason with her. Just passively agree with her so she’ll stop. Her input is often irrelevant and out of touch, yet it directly impacts how you're expected to do your job. This pattern doesn’t just derail productivity—it erodes morale, creates confusion, and leads to a constant cycle of reactive, ineffective decision-making that staff are left scrambling to fix.