'PTO is not permission to vanish': Boss bothers employee with constant non-urgent messages during his vacation, employee forwards messages to HR

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  • A businessman with gray hair wearing a black turtleneck stands by the window in an otherwise empty office.
  • "[Would I be wrong] if I forward my boss’s PTO texts to HR after he tried to dock my pay for not answering while on vacation?"

    I booked five days PTO months ago, 10 to 14. Flights paid in March, 412 dollars round trip, non refundable. I put it on the shared calendar, sent the formal request
  • in our HR tool, got the green check. I also handed over a one page handoff with passwords in the vault, who owns what tickets,
  • all that. I told my boss twice that I would be off grid after 2 pm on the 9th because I was flying to see my dad. He said, cool, enjoy.
  • Day one of PTO, 7 32 am, he texts, can you jump on a quick call. Then pings in Teams. Then emails my personal, subject line urgent. It was about a
  • spreadsheet that literally has a tab named readme with step by step. I ignored it, because PTO. At 10 11 am he wrote, if you do not respond I will mark today as unapproved absence. I replied
  • once at 10 20 with a short sentence, I am on approved PTO, see calendar and handoff, Jane is the point of contact. He reacted with a thumbs up, then kept
  • texting. Day two he called me three times during my dad's appointment and when I silenced the phone he started slacking my junior, dragging her in.
  • When I came back Monday the timesheet showed one day unpaid. He said I failed to be reachable and that PTO is not permission to "vanish." I printed
  • the approval, the handoff and the messages where he writes, and I quote, you can answer basic questions by phone. HR lady looked at it, told us to resolve it
  • "together" first. Boss told me to just take the day from next month to keep peace. I said I want it corrected now and if not I will escalate.
  • If I forward all his messages and my paper trail to HR and cc his manager, WIBTA. Part of me feels petty, the other part is tired of being punished for boundaries.
  • For what it is worth, when he took PTO in April nobody bothered him, we literally moved a client meeting. Should I push this, or is it making drama at work for no reason?
  • An older businessman in a gray suit standing by the office window while calling someone.
  • TitaniaT-Rex • 5h ago What the actual fuck? Paid time off means you are OFF. HR should not tell you to resolve it together. They need to handle it. The time
  • was approved prior to the trip and you did everything to set the team up for success. Your boss sounds utterly incompetent.
  • Glittersparkles7 • 5h ago NTA. Go above that HR agent's head. I also suggest you start looking for a new job.
  • • Trippping Roses 5h ago NTA. If it we're me, is also continue to escalate. Paid time off is time of and you are under no obligation to answer work questions at that time and your boss's
  • incompetence does not constitute an emergency leave of your PTO on your part.
  • Plus he's giving you a black mark on your record too use against you in your year end review of you foolishly keep the peace.
  • Nope, keep fighting the good fight here and if HR does not act, is suggest consulting a lawyer and your state labor board.
  • A frustrated businessman on the phone stands in his office.

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