Overall sentiment in the reviews is mixed but leans positive for ambiance, many frontline staff, activities, and the physical facility, while showing notable and recurring concerns around consistency of clinical care, staffing levels, fees/administration, and certain cleanliness/safety issues.
Care quality and clinical oversight: Several reviewers praise the caregiving team and specific clinical supports (medication plans, hospice and physical therapy availability, and named Med Techs who are dependable). Many families feel reassured by the caregiving and nursing staff and report excellent, compassionate hands-on care that provides peace of mind. However, multiple serious concerns also appear: reports of inadequate care (including refusals of toileting assistance), a failure to increase the level of care as needs changed, and one allegation that facility care caused a stage 2 pressure wound. There are also reports of medication administration inconsistencies and at least one claim that falls were not reported. These are high-impact clinical quality issues. The pattern is that some staff and shifts deliver excellent care while other shifts or roles appear inconsistent — suggesting uneven training, staffing, or supervision.
Staffing, culture, and communication: Reviews contain many examples of warm, compassionate, dedicated staff who go above and beyond (staying late, facilitating transitions, helping set up services). Several families name staff members who made a positive difference (Bri, Carol, Valarie). That said, there are repeated complaints about inconsistent staffing levels (understaffed, thinner weekend coverage), disorganization, and poor scheduling. Communication and management are mixed: some reviewers describe clear, supportive communication and professional administration, while others cite poor management, rude administrative interactions, unresolved paperwork/signature problems, and a Director of Nursing perceived as uninformed. There are also isolated but important complaints about staff behavior (bullying toward residents) that conflict with the otherwise plentiful praise for caring employees.
Facility, cleanliness, and maintenance: The facility itself receives consistent praise: attractive, nicely decorated, newer-feeling building with well-maintained common areas and beautiful outdoor spaces. Many reviewers describe a home-like atmosphere, large suites or comfortable studio rooms, and private areas for residents. Cleanliness is generally praised, but troubling exceptions were reported — for example, lack of clean pads on chairs and bugs spotted in a break room. A few maintenance issues (e.g., a broken sink) and variable responsiveness to billing/maintenance concerns were reported. Overall, physical environment and aesthetics are strong, but cleanliness and infection-control or maintenance lapses appear in a minority of reports and should be addressed.
Dining and activities: Dining is a frequent strength: many reviewers highlight well-prepared, nourishing meals, homemade soups and gravies, and creative food events. Several social and programming highlights are repeatedly mentioned (ice cream socials, Great Gatsby event, cooking on Fridays, potlucks, outings, music entertainment, Sunday school). Activity staff receive positive mentions for engagement and helping residents maintain independence and social life. That said, dining quality is not uniformly praised — some note inconsistent cooks, insufficient portions, or dissatisfaction with lunch/dinner despite good breakfasts. During COVID some services and dining were reduced, limiting activities for some residents. Overall, social life and programming are prominent positives, with occasional variability in meal quality.
Costs, admission assessment, and administration of fees: Multiple reviewers flagged financial transparency and fee issues. Some families report an initial underestimation of care needs at move-in and then discovered additional costs for higher levels of care. Specific financial complaints include an unexpected or “shocking” $3,000 community fee, grief-period billing after death, poor refund handling, and general price increases that made the monthly cost higher than expected. A number of reviewers recommend the community conditionally — they like the facility and care but urge prospective residents to get clear, explicit pricing and contract terms up front. These administrative and financial concerns are a common thread and could significantly affect family satisfaction.
Patterns and recommendations: The dominant pattern is a facility with strong assets — attractive physical plant, warm and engaged staff, robust activities, and many families who would recommend it — coexisting with inconsistent clinical performance, variable staffing levels, surprises in billing, and administrative shortcomings. Positive experiences often name specific staff and note quick responsiveness, while negative experiences often describe gaps in care or problematic fees. Prospective residents and families should (1) obtain and document a comprehensive, written description of initial and escalated care assessments and costs (including any community fees and policies for billing after death), (2) ask specifically about staffing ratios, weekend coverage, and fall/medication reporting policies, (3) tour multiple times and request to meet nursing leadership (including the DON) to assess clinical oversight, and (4) inquire about cleanliness protocols and recent quality metrics. For families already considering The Addison of Clen-Moore Place, the facility appears to offer an attractive living environment and many compassionate staff, but they should perform due diligence on clinical consistency and contract terms to mitigate the recurring concerns reflected in these reviews.