Overall sentiment across the reviews is mixed to negative, with a strong polarization between positive reports about the facility, dining, and some staff members, and serious concerns about memory care, night shift performance, safety, and management/staffing stability. Several reviewers praise the facility's location, appearance, and food, and they highlight specific staff and administration members who provided good care and family interaction. However, a number of detailed, severe complaints raise red flags about resident safety and the consistency of care, particularly in the memory care unit and overnight.
Care quality and staffing are the central, recurring themes. Many reviewers describe daytime staff as kind, attentive, and interactive with families, and some reviewers explicitly say the nursing home or specific aides are wonderful. At the same time, multiple reviews describe a decline in quality over time: what some families called "amazing staff" and "great administration" in 2022 appears to have eroded by 2023, with reports of high turnover, understaffing, and less experienced or "uneducated" staff. Memory care is repeatedly singled out as problematic: reviewers report inconsistent care, inadequate dementia training, and that nurses and doctors are difficult to find or rarely visit. Several reviews recount specific incidents that suggest neglect—patients left sedated, smelling of not being bathed, or being transferred to the hospital after delays. There are also allegations that nurses kept a resident sedated and that a doctor was not called promptly, which led to a hospital transfer; these items indicate potential failures in clinical oversight and escalation.
Safety and abuse-related allegations are among the most serious concerns. Multiple reviewers describe night shift neglect and unprofessional behavior, naming a CNA (Josh) and alleging cruelty and neglect. There are reports of a dining-room incident where a resident requested an unattended restroom and subsequently wet herself, and other accounts of residents falling with no immediate help. More alarming facility problems include claims of pests (roaches), wildlife breaches (raccoons falling through the ceiling), and even staff sleeping in residents' beds—these raise questions about housekeeping, maintenance, and supervision. Some reviewers also mention a "not original Monticello House" comment and references to "dark things" and nightmares; while ambiguous, these suggest guests have had distressing experiences or perceptions tied to the facility or its history.
Communication and management responsiveness are inconsistent across reviews. Several families praise administration and the staff who interact with families, but others report poor communication, inconsistent answers from staff, and Medicaid-related concerns that could affect care or placement. Reviewers allege that doctors rarely see patients, that nurse availability varies widely by shift, and that staff training for dementia care is insufficient. The pattern of positive daytime staffing but problematic nights suggests managerial oversight of scheduling and supervision is an area needing attention. Reviewers explicitly call for closer monitoring and action, indicating that some incidents were serious enough that families expected administrative intervention.
Dining, activities, and quality-of-life items receive generally positive remarks, but with caveats. Food quality is frequently praised—many reviewers state the food is "very good," that meal plans are solid, and snacks are readily available. Pets being allowed inside and staff engagement with families are repeatedly mentioned as quality-of-life benefits. That said, memory care dining is reported as inconsistent with the regular dining area, hinting at disparities in meal service or dining environment between units.
Taken together, the reviews paint a facility with strong potential and several real strengths—convenient location, pleasant daytime staff, good food, family interaction, and reasonable pricing—but also with significant, actionable problems. The most urgent areas of concern are memory care practices, night shift staffing and supervision, clinical escalation (doctor and nurse responsiveness), hygiene and safety incidents, pest and building maintenance issues, and high turnover leading to variable staff competency. Prospective families should weigh both sets of impressions: visit during multiple shifts (including nights), observe the memory care unit and night staff, ask about dementia training and staff-to-resident ratios, request records or examples of incident response and staffing changes over time, and check how the facility handles Medicaid-related placements and oversight. Current management should be alerted to the pattern of complaints—particularly the specific allegations of neglect and safety hazards—since these represent serious risks that require immediate investigation and remediation if they are occurring as described.