Boss pressures employee to postpone PTO due to upcoming project deadline, employee refuses, citing HR policy: 'Managers are responsible for planning around employee availability'

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    "Use all your PTO before December 31 or lose it? Alright, don't mind if I do even if the project burns."

    This happened a couple of years ago at my old job. A pretty demanding corporate gig where we were always juggling tight deadlines, constant emails, and way too many meetings that could've been Slack messages.
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    Around early November, HR sent out one of those all-staff emails with a bright red banner and urgent tone. It read something like:
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    REMINDER: All unused PTO must be taken before December 31st. We will not be allowing rollovers this year. Please schedule your remaining days immediately or risk losing them.
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    No exceptions. No flexibility. No consideration for project timelines.
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    Now, I wasn't one to take a ton of time off during the year mostly because every time I tried, something urgent would come up and I'd get guilted into postponing. So by November, I
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    had 10 full days of paid time off just sitting there. And according to HR's big red warning, I had about 6 weeks to use them.
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    Naturally, I did what any burnt- out, underappreciated employee would do: I opened the calendar and booked myself off from December 18 to December 31.
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    Two full weeks. Right before the New Year. Smack in the middle of the most chaotic time in our project cycle.
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    A week later, my manager (let's call him Rob) came to me in a mild panic.
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    Rob: Hey, I saw your PTO request. I was hoping we could shift that a little. December's going to be a critical time for [project name], and we really need all hands on deck.
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    Me: Yeah, I get that, but HR sent that PTO deadline. If I dont use those days, I lose them. And I've already worked through enough vacations this year.
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    He looked uncomfortable but couldn't argue with the logic. I even forwarded him the HR email with the subject line: Using My Days. As Required :). He escalated it to HR, of course. HR's reply?
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    We understand it may be inconvenient, but our PTO policy is final. Managers are responsible for planning around employee availability.
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    That reply felt like Christmas came early. So I prepped my team as best I could, left detailed notes, and on December 18, I logged out, stress-free. While they were scrambling to hit deadlines,
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    dealing with last-minute client requests, and working late... | was sipping hot chocolate, watching Netflix, and actually enjoying my holiday season for once.
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    When I came back in January, the project had been delivered barely. The team was exhausted, mistakes had been made, and the post-mortem meeting was basically 45 minutes of finger- pointing. But no one dared say a word to me.
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    After all, I was just following HR's rules. Moral of the story? If a company insists you follow policy to the letter, don't feel bad when you do even if it means watching the ship catch fire from your cozy vacation cabin.
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    dlc741 6h ago • Who came up with those idiotic deadlines? All of our projects assumed that at least half the staff would take off for holidays and planned for a slowdown from Thanksgiving through New Year's.
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    Cheezburger Image 10516048128
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    Cerulean_IsFancy... • 6h ago You missed the real moral: take your PTO. The project will survive. Unless you're an officer or a stakeholder and expect a substantial reward for the effort, don't surrender your personal life for the job.
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    Chuck_Miller_PZ. 6h ago This is an example of poor management. A manager needs to do more than ensure that work is done on time. They also have to look after their people. Ensuring they take their PTO is an example of that. I doubt that that's the lesson they took from that though

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