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Part-Time Worker Outsmarts Overtime Ban by Starting Lockup Early – Boss Panics and Reverses Policy

by Sunny Nguyen
November 11, 2025
in Social Issues

Working part-time in the opticians department of a major supermarket chain, the storyteller, let’s call her ThereShallBeWings, was used to stretching a 9-hour weekly schedule across weekends.

Saturdays meant 3pm to 9pm, Sundays 1pm to 4pm, with the added responsibility of closing the department.

Closing wasn’t quick; organizing inventory, locking display cases, and making sure nothing got damaged often extended her day well past scheduled hours.

Yet despite routinely working longer than her official schedule, she had never been asked to fill out overtime forms.

Part-Time Worker Outsmarts Overtime Ban by Starting Lockup Early - Boss Panics and Reverses Policy
Not the actual photo

Here’s The Orignal Post:

Overtime ban? Alright, I guess I'd better lock up now?

This is an old story from back when I used to work in the opticians department of a major supermarket chain.

I was a part-timer, working 9 hours per week: 3pm-9pm on Saturdays, and 1pm-4pm on Sundays.

Part of my job was to close down the department on both days, because none of the managers liked being around at closing time.

The department closed at 9pm on Saturdays but it was often about 9:20 that I actually left.

Closing down a department takes time, mostly because you can't do it when customers are browsing. Unsurprisingly, I consistently worked more hours than I was supposed to.

All store employees were on the clock, and for some reason the store took readings down to the second.

You were paid an hourly rate to within a few seconds of how long you were clocked in for.

My manager (I'll call her Val, because that was her name) called a meeting at 3pm on a Saturday, which coincidentally was the time I was scheduled to start work.

Everyone in the department was either starting or finishing their shifts within a couple of hours of then, so it was a logical time, but that was about the only...

The thrust of the meeting was that "some people" - she said, looking directly at me down the length of her not-inconsiderable nose, were claiming more than their allotted hours,...

Henceforth, all overtime must be approved in writing. This was entirely her decision. Other departments didn't have this problem as long as you weren't taking the mick.

Fast forward to about 8:45pm. Val and I were the only employees left in the department. She started to gather her things, as is her way.

And I started the process of putting our more expensive frames into their night display cases, where they could safely be locked away when the department was closed.

Val: What on Earth are you doing, ThereShallBeWings? Me: I'm locking up. I have to make sure I don't go over my hours today.

Val: This department has to be open until 9pm. It's in the store handbook. You can't lock up right now, my boss will be furious.

Me: You know from experience that it takes a good 10 minutes (I lied, it's actually more like 20) to lock up. I'm not allowed to be on the premises...

I have to start locking up otherwise I'll be disciplined. I reached for the tannoy and my voice saying "Good evening. Would Mrs Lock please come to the optical department?

Mrs Lock to the optical department. Thank you!" resonated through the store, code for "Security, bring the keys, we're locking up". Val goes white as a sheet.

The first cracks in her caked-on makeup began to show, I could see the look on her snooty face as a very large penny began to drop.

She yelled "Wait here!" while leaving the department with a purposeful stride.

By the time she'd returned, I'd explained to the security guard, what's happening. He agreed to play along. We start (slowly) locking down the spectacle frames.

Val, with sweat starting to show on her brow, wordlessly handed me a hastily-scribbled note authorising 30 minutes of overtime. I showed it to the security guard, who nodded.

Val left without a word, looking really flustered, just as a customer walked in. My friend from security unlocked the frames again and I went to serve.

The following day, Val's usual snooty demeanour had changed. She didn't look contrite, but there were definitely a few cracks in her expression.

She took me to one side, and without preamble, handed me a new rota, and launched into what was clearly a well-rehearsed speech.

Val: ThereShallBeWings, I have approved your request to extend your hours to 10 hours a week.

I now expect you to work from 3pm until 9:30pm on Saturdays, and from 1pm until 4:30pm on Sundays. I trust that this will not be a problem?.

Me: Oh, that's fine, thank you Val.

Val: And henceforth, if you should happen to work slightly over your hours, do not be overly concerned about it.

TL;DR: Stuck-up boss who really likes the word "henceforth" for some reason announces an overtime ban, not realising the overtime was me closing down the department after the close of...

As a result, I start to close down early as she's leaving. She has a panic attack, increases my hours, and reverses the ban. Edit Juan: Holy bus, thanks for...

Edit Too: "Overtime" in this sense means "working over your alloted hours". It's nothing to do with hourly pay.

The problem arose when her manager, Val, called a department meeting one Saturday at 3pm – the start of the storyteller’s shift – to announce a strict new overtime policy.

Val’s message was blunt: all overtime must now be approved in writing, and this ban applied specifically to their department.

Everyone else seemed unaffected, but Val made it clear she was directly addressing ThereShallBeWings, the habitual overtime worker.

Fast forward to 8:45pm. Only Val and the storyteller remained in the department.

ThereShallBeWings began locking away the more expensive spectacle frames, aware that doing so took longer than the store’s official closing time.

Val noticed and objected immediately: the handbook dictated the department remain open until 9pm.

The storyteller calmly pointed out that she risked being disciplined if she exceeded her scheduled hours and needed to begin the closing procedure.

The storyteller then used the store’s internal code over the tannoy: “Good evening. Would Mrs Lock please come to the optical department? Mrs Lock to the optical department. Thank you!”

Security responded, fully aware of the situation, and the closing process began in earnest. Val, visibly flustered, scribbled a hasty authorization for 30 minutes of overtime, which allowed the department to be secured without incident.

By the time a customer wandered in, the frames were back on display and business continued as usual.

The next day, Val’s attitude had subtly shifted. She handed out a new rota, increasing the storyteller’s weekly hours to ten and extending Saturday and Sunday shifts to account for the extra work of closing the department.

Her words, slightly formal and rehearsed, effectively reversed the overtime ban: slight overruns were no longer a concern.

What began as a strict policy became a recognition of the practical realities of the role, albeit after a minor workplace standoff.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

Reddit users widely supported the storyteller’s clever maneuver. Some highlighted the absurdity of scheduling employees to close a department without accounting for the time it actually takes to secure it.

elean0rigby − I don’t understand these businesses that schedule their employees until close (or right at open) and are surprised that their employees are either

1. Staying later, causing them to go over in their scheduled hours... or

2. Are asshurt about a drop in productivity when their employee leaves at the time they were scheduled to. At my place of work, if we open at 10am.

The manager’s shift starts at 9am so they can go to the bank and do some admin time; the associate comes in at 9:30. If we close at 9pm. Both...

Fixedgearmike − Awesome! I just want to note that this story happens all the time. Mid level management "we need to save money lower managers, stop paying overtime."

Low level managers "alright crew we aren't working overtime." Actual working employees "uuuuhh if you say so your the boss" Mid level managers "WHAT HAPPENED TO PRODUCTIVITY?!"

Low level manager "gee I don't know boss we should form a committee to find out why our numbers are down"

[Reddit User] − Slightly off topic, but that Mr. Lock code is really terrible.

E404_User_Not_Found − (I'll call her Val, because that was her name) Omg, I would give you gold if I could afford it just for this. My biggest Reddit pet-peeve is...

about some random event in some random town but the storyteller still finds it necessary to change the name and, for whatever reason, point out that it's been changed.

"So I met this guy, we'll call him James"—like s__t if you said his real name, Tim, we'd _all_ know who you were talking about!

Others lauded the storyteller’s use of the store tannoy and coordination with security, describing the plan as “clever” and “justified.” 

Saintbaba − Man, what? What insane company doesn't already include the time it takes to close as part of the hours for last shift? That's like retail/food services 101.

wolfgame − Back in 2003 I was working for an orthodox Jewish mortgage bank, initially as helpdesk and moved on to systems administration and some light development.

About two months after I started, we got one of those biometric timeclocks. I've never been one to clock in and out reliably and I frequently just skipped it.

Eventually my boss had had enough and he said that if I didn't clock out accurately, he would start docking my pay accordingly.

Welllllll not long after that, I was working on migrating our internal domain from NT4 to Active Directory, including setting up Exchange Server 2003.

The parts of it that I could run in parallel, I did throughout the day, but then I had to stick around to kick off the migration and make sure...

My boss had already left, but before he did, he asked me to let him know when I was leaving.

So around 10PM, I'm happy with the way things are going and figure I can leave for the night. We shouldn't be expecting any downtime at this point. So I...

See, orthodox Jewish companies follow the same rules for Shabbot as orthodox Jews. No work after sundown on Friday, and I wasn't going to do this on a Monday.

He ended up fudging the numbers because why would I know that? I still had to check in, but it was fun watching him squirm.

AVdev − All store employees were on the clock, and for some reason the store took readings down to the second.

You were paid an hourly rate to within a few seconds of how long you were clocked in for. That's some next level corporate greed right there.

Payroll Director: Does Math

PM: We can "save" a few bucks per month by tracking time to the second instead of the minute! Executive Staff: Huzzah! Begin the rollout to all stores and get...

Many agreed that mid-level management often struggles to reconcile corporate cost-cutting with the realities of day-to-day operations, while lower-level employees bear the brunt. 

DaddyBeanDaddyBean − I used to work a closing shift at a convenience store.

We could get all of our cleaning & restocking done in the last hour or two before close, but the final numbers for the day's-end report couldn't be pulled until...

The store closed at midnight, and the cashier was paid until 12:30. Training a new person, the closing paperwork took longer,

and NewGuy got a little upset that we were there until 12:45 the first two nights, and only paid until 12:30.

He calmed right the hell down when I told him that once you know the process, it takes less than 30 minutes, and if you learn it "my way", you...

You'll be out of here at 12:10, day after day, week after week, but still get paid until 12:30.

twcsata − I know she was kind of a d__k, but I gotta say, she owned up (sort of) and fixed it promptly. That’s almost impressive.

Kurotan − I would have called her over to close up and walked out at 9 leaving her to put stuff away.

This story illustrates a classic workplace dilemma: policies versus reality. The official rule was simple – no overtime without prior approval but the practical requirement of closing the department inevitably created extra work.

The storyteller’s solution balanced rule compliance with operational necessity, using clever negotiation and clear communication.

It highlights the importance of understanding the operational context before enforcing rigid policies and demonstrates that employees can sometimes manage “rule conflicts” with ingenuity rather than confrontation.

From a management perspective, the episode serves as a cautionary tale. Overly rigid adherence to policy, without accounting for real-world procedures, can backfire and inadvertently reward the very behavior it seeks to curb.

Allowing for flexible, reasonable adjustments, such as the post-story rota, prevents friction, improves morale, and aligns policy with actual workflow requirements.

TL;DR: A part-time optician faced an overtime ban imposed by a manager who didn’t account for the practical time needed to close the department.

Using clever initiative, she began locking up early while coordinating with security. The manager panicked, authorized overtime, and ultimately extended the employee’s weekly hours, reversing the ban.

Reddit users praised the tactical approach and the workplace lesson about balancing rules with operational reality.

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

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