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Vaughan Public Libraries

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Worst work experience I've ever had... - Circulation Assistant Vaughan Public Libraries Employee Review

1.0
Jan 12, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

I learned that high turnover at a workplace is a red flag (Circulation Assistants at Vaughan Public Libraries [VPL] have a very high turnover). I also learned never to apply to VPL again...

Cons

This library system does not value its employees. So many of my fellow Circulation Assistants had injuries from not receiving proper training for the numerous physical demands of the job. Vaughan Public Libraries (VPL) does not even come close to how busy the Toronto Public Library is, but the higher ups at VPL must have convinced themselves that it is the busiest library system in the world, in order to justify what they put their employees through… When I was a Circulation Assistant, I was frequently pressured to work beyond my limits (and even to skip breaks) in order to meet a quota of carts shelved or to complete all my tasks during my desk time. To this day, I do not understand why those duties required so much pressure... I found that Circulation Assistants were looked down upon and were heavily micromanaged by almost everyone, including Information Assistants, Librarians, and ESPECIALLY Clerks. Information Assistants and Clerks are not Circulation Assistants' supervisors on paper, but some certainly acted like they were. (At the branch where I worked, one Clerk would even give new or more naive Circulation Assistants her work to do...) There were also often unprofessional discussions in the workroom, such as some employees openly talking behind other employees’ backs, and discussions about political topics that would be more appropriate to have elsewhere. There is also little opportunity for growth at VPL, particularly for Circulation Assistants. I truly believe that the higher ups at VPL do not care about Circulation Assistants, and this attitude is a major reason for the mistreatment of Circulation Assistants at VPL, and also contributes to the high turnover for Circulation Assistants there. This minimum wage job is not worth the mental toll or the damage to your body. If you are interested in library work, I highly recommend that you apply to another library system...

Explore other reviews about Vaughan Public Libraries

4.0
Feb 6, 2026
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Flexiblity on workdays, decent pay, great colleagues

Cons

To work on the weekends.

1.0
Oct 9, 2025
Recommend
CEO approval
Business outlook

Pros

Most staff are friendly and easy to work with.

Cons

My experience working at Vaughan Public Libraries has been disappointing and disheartening. What should have been an environment focused on learning, equity, and community service has instead become an example of how poor management, lack of accountability, and systemic neglect can destroy staff morale and trust. There is a consistent and well-known imbalance in workload distribution across staff. Youth services employees are buried under multiple programs, projects, desk shifts, and outreach initiatives, while others in similar roles, are given little to no comparable responsibility. When concerns are raised about this, management’s responses are dismissive or entirely absent. The CEO consistently says that her door is open and accepts all feedback but only when it's compliments. It is clear that leadership rewards silence and punishes any critique or negative feedback. Attempts to address these issues have been met with stonewalling, deflection, gaslighting, and manipulation. Emails and discussions about burnout, skipped breaks, and unrealistic expectations are ignored until the problem escalates to the point of illness. Staff who speak up are told to produce doctor’s notes, enter attendance programs, or look at the mental health videos and workshops available to “manage their stress better,” rather than having the actual causes of the stress investigated. It’s an insult to the professionalism of employees who are doing the work of multiple people simply because management refuses to act fairly or transparently. The HR department as a whole is broken. Opportunities are mishandled, information is withheld, and decisions are made behind closed doors without consistency or proper communication. Employees are strung along with vague answers or bureaucratic excuses that only seem to benefit management when it suits them. It’s an environment where integrity is replaced by politics and where qualified, dedicated staff are treated as disposable. Being asked to interview for a position you have been doing for years is so ridiculous. You need to interview to go from full-time to part-time in the same role which is the biggest waste of time. For an organization that claims to “inspire opportunities,” Vaughan Public Libraries has instead inspired exhaustion, distrust, and disengagement among many of its staff. The disconnect between the public image and internal reality is staggering. I'd like to know who was providing the information to win all these "Best place to work" awards? They forgot to ask the actual staff. Staff are passionate about their communities, but that passion is constantly undermined by leadership that refuses to listen, support, or lead with empathy. Until VPL addresses the toxic culture of inequity, burnout, and mismanagement, it will continue to lose the trust of both staff and community members who expect better from a public institution. What could be a progressive, inclusive, and forward-thinking library system is instead mired in dysfunction and hypocrisy. We are so severely understaffed, it is jarring. People are having vacations rejected because they can't find coverage. It is infuriating that this is the staff's problem. For a public facing job, all librarians are rewarded with work from home shifts while Information Assistants are in branch all day, dealing with the public and doing the actual work, delivering programs, engaging with the community and working alone in branch. If you have a public facing job, there is no reason for you to have a work from home shift!

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