PCL Construction Reviews

4.0

78% would recommend to a friend

(1,276 total reviews)
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Chris Gower

89% approve of CEO

71% positive business outlook

PCL Construction has an employee rating of 4.0 out of 5 stars, based on 1,276 company reviews on Glassdoor which indicates that most employees have a good working experience there. The PCL Construction employee rating is in line with the average (within 1 standard deviation) for employers within the Construction, repair and maintenance industry (3.7 stars).

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1K reviews
1.0
15 Mar 2018

A lot of these reviews are correct - and not the good ones

Anonymous employee
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

The health insurance is the cheapest I've ever had. That's pretty much it.

Cons

Where do I start? The person who wrote that PCL stands for People Come Last is spot on. Here are a list of cons: - People Come Last unless you are the boss's favorite. - Unless you completely toe the company line, brown-nose constantly, & agree with everything management says, they won't like you. I've seen people with less experience get promoted over people with more experience just because they are the boss's favorites. - When management is done with you, they will treat you poorly to try to push you out. If you don't leave on their "push out" schedule, they will fire you (make sure you negotiate a good severance). - If you are a woman with children, this is not the place for you. They expect work to come first, 100% of the time. There is no work/life balance. All of management's wives are stay-at-home moms, so they expect the same from all women it seems. - Diversity is basically non-existent. Expect to see a lot of white males. - Forget about going to HR for anything - they are there to protect the company, not care about the employees. - If you are having any personal issues outside of work, make sure to not let it show at work because they really don't care about anything that's going on at home or with your health. - The share program is a joke. The offerings are way too expensive to purchase so you have to get a loan so it doesn't actually pay off for about 7 years because you have to pay down your loans. I've never heard of having to get a loan to make an investment. And they don't tell you this in your interview, they just make you think you're going to make all this extra money immediately. - You get no feedback on your work performance so you have no clue if you are doing a good job or not, until they just fire you out of nowhere. - Don't try to talk to your co-workers about anything other than work or you will get the dirtiest looks from management - it's all work all the time. No room for water cooler talk. - They preach that it's the "PCL family" - if that's true, this is one dysfunctional family.

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PCL Construction Response
8y
We are disappointed that you had a negative experience during your time at PCL. Due to the confidential nature of your concerns, we would like to continue this conversation with you offline. Please reach out to us via glassdoor@pcl.com so that we may discuss these areas further.
1.0
18 Apr 2017
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- Compensation in the form of salary is low. You should expect to work for your share dividends instead. It will take about 7 years for that to catch up to industry pay. - Benefits package is good. - PCL has the bonding capacity to bid and win large projects. So you can expect to work on larger projects.

Cons

- I worked for PCL for more than 5 years. I started off as a "Project Coordinator" (even though I was doing the work of the Senior Project Manager) and, eventually, became a Project Manager after many years of jumping through hoops. - Upon taking paternity leave, PCL decided to courier me a termination letter the day before I was to return to work. I think this says a lot about who runs this company. You are just a number. They will pigeon hole you. - Poor management by HR Department and District Management. They will not investigate harassment or discrimination on the job site or in the project office. You will have to prove everything to them. Good luck when senior staff is in kahootz with other staff members on your project. - PCL purposefully understaff their projects. They have to make a large profit to pay their share dividends somehow. They are employee-owned after all. So they choose to spread their staff on as many projects as possible. Don't be surprised if you end up working on more than one project at the same time. - Unreasonable expectations based on salary paid. They will pile on the workload and expect you to keep up with the workload. If you don't keep up with the workload, they will put you on a Performance Improvement Plan (PIP) whereby you have three months to meet their unreasonable expectations or they will terminate your employment. - The annual salary is much lower than industry average. They will sell you on the idea that once you buy enough shares over the years, that you will be making more money based on share dividends. But to buy the shares you will have to apply for a special bank loan to finance the shares. So that debt will continue to rise each year with every share you purchase. - Very long working hours. You're expected to do whatever it takes to keep the job rolling. So you find yourself overworked and sacrificing your evenings, weekends and holidays to catch up on work. I can remember watching my newborn son grow in his crib each night because I was working 12 hour days on a hospital project. - Career opportunities are minimal unless you're a jock, especially if you played semi-professional hockey. You are just a cog in a wheel otherwise. They will have you jumping through hoops trying to get a promotion. District management rely on the project's senior management to pass judgement on you. So you better kiss serious behind and remember your manager sees you as potential competition and a threat to their long-term employment. - Hypocrisy prevails. PCL will NOT encourage you to attain your Project Management Professional (PMP) designation to become the best Project Manager you can be. Instead they will offer you their College of Construction courses that mimic only a partial set of PMP skills. They don't want you to be more proficient because you will leave to go to another company and demand more money. So they will try to keep you ignorant for as long as possible. You'll know this and understand once you see the thick binders of operating procedures and checklists. - Beware of this large privately-owned corporation. They do things very differently. They will take advantage of you. And then they will fabricate a story to devalue your skills to keep you in your place and to justify paying you a low salary. And whenever they choose, they will terminate your employment without breaking a sweat. In their eyes, you are always replaceable. - After they fire you, they will not even have the decency to provide you with a letter of recommendation to help you on your future career. - Be especially forewarned if you are just graduating from university and considering starting your career with PCL. There are many construction management companies that are much, much better choices.

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PCL Construction Response
9y
I am concerned about many of the comments you have made as this is not the experience we want our employees to have. We take harassment and discrimination claims very seriously, and encourage our employees to use our anonymous ethics helpline if they do not feel comfortable approaching management or human resources. I would appreciate it if you reached out to us at glassdoor@pcl.com so we can gather more details from you and investigate further.
1.0
17 Mar 2020
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

- You may or may not get a competent manager - Family oriented culture

Cons

- Poor employee share system and dividends - Poor salaries - Spoiled and clueless leadership and C-levels - "I got mine" Boomer-culture On top of the above cons, which I could go on-and-on about after more than 10 years here, their response to COVID-19 has been hilariously underwhelming. Whereas any modern corporation is allowing employees to work-from-home to deal with workplace congestion (the headquarters is PACKED), they have basically told us that we are responsible for disinfecting our workstation (with what?) and that there's nothing wrong. They have also told us that work-from-home is not allowed (only in extreme circumstances). Since there are confirmed cases of employees returning from the US and abroad who are NOT self-isolating and are already at work within days, the office is now a potential ground-zero for transmission. Despite a very disingenuous video from our morally-bankrupt CEO saying "your health and safety is the number #1 priority", there are passive-aggressive emails going out and managers are telling employees to return to work because work-from-home is not allowed. They are putting employees, and the community, at risk for the sake of profit over potential loss of efficiency for a few weeks. Work-from-home in emergency circumstances should be a possibility for EVERYONE, not just managers, executives, and their friends. Disgusting company, disgusting behavior, and dangerous for the community. Stay away from PCL. Things have gone downhill in the past 10 years and this is the breaking point.

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PCL Construction Response
6y
We certainly understand the heightened emotion and fear that this global situation is creating. PCL supports the recent government recommendations of flattening the curve of COVID-19 transmissions and has therefore implemented a work from home strategy. We are encouraging employees who can work from home to do so. This reduction in our employee populations in our workplaces, along with existing personal hygiene, social distancing and cleaning practices, will further reduce the COVID-19 transmission risk for those essential roles that may still be in our offices and on our job-sites.
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