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Grocery Store Manager Forbids Overtime, Spends His Night Scanning Turkeys Himself

by Layla Bui
November 4, 2025
in Social Issues

There’s a fine line between enforcing a rule and setting yourself up for embarrassment. One grocery store manager learned that the hard way after telling his employee he couldn’t stay a minute past closing, no matter what.

When Thanksgiving shoppers packed the aisles with overflowing carts, the worker saw the perfect moment to put those words into action. The clock struck ten, and his shift and patience officially ended.

When management values numbers over people, it only takes one perfectly timed “OK, boss” to make the system collapse

Grocery Store Manager Forbids Overtime, Spends His Night Scanning Turkeys Himself
not the actual photo

'Not allowed overtime? Have fun checking everybody out?'

I used to work as a checker/stocker at a grocery store.

Our store manager (Mike) was a d-bag, and would always try to s__ew people.

There was massive turnover at this store.

So one day, I get called into his office and asked why I gave overtime on my time card.

I was usually scheduled for 1-10pm (hour lunch), but the store didn't close until 10,

so I had to count out my drawer afterwards.

I explained this to Mike and he didn't care.

He went off saying that I should be doing this earlier, and that I was to leave at 10 on the dot so that I had NO OVERTIME.

Got it, boss man. A couple of weeks later it was Thanksgiving time.

We had extra checkers, but from 8-10pm, I was the only one besides the manager who closed the store that day (Mike).

I made the announcement at about 9.40 that we would be closing in 20 minutes,

and to please finish up your purchases to check out.

People started coming up to check out, and their carts were LOADED since it was almost Thanksgiving.

I go about checking them all out, but then the clock turns to 10:00.

I stop in the middle of my transaction.

Call Mike on the store phone and tell him I'm leaving since I can't have overtime. Walk over and clock out.

There are still 6 to 7 customers with full baskets in line at this time.

Mike comes over and is yelling at me as I'm walking out.

But I remind him that he specifically told me that I can't have ANY overtime.

When I got into work the next day, I was written up.

But it was worth it. Apparently he spent the next 30-45 minutes checking people out.

TL;DR: I did what my boss told me to. He got stuck checking people out by himself for 45 minutes after the store closed.

EDIT: I haven't worked at this store for almost 7 years.

I'm a teacher now, so thankfully I don't have to deal with customers now. Just some bat-s__t crazy parents.

While many workplaces set clear rules to control overtime costs, applying those rules too rigidly can create bigger problems. In this case, the store manager told the employee to clock out exactly at 10 p.m., even though the work required closing duties that naturally ran past that time.

By following that instruction literally, the employee exposed how unrealistic the policy was, leaving the manager to handle a full line of customers alone.

Strict “no-overtime” rules often come from a desire to protect budgets, but they can backfire when they prevent employees from finishing essential end-of-day tasks.

According to the U.S. Department of Labor, non-exempt employees must be paid for every minute they work, even if that time wasn’t pre-approved by a manager. Denying overtime pay for necessary duties, such as balancing a register or closing a store, can easily cross into wage violation territory.

Beyond the legal side, this kind of situation also affects workplace morale. When employees are asked to rush or cut corners to avoid overtime, they often feel undervalued or pressured to choose between compliance and quality.

Studies from the American Psychological Association show that over-controlled work environments, where employees have little say over their schedules or tasks, increase stress and reduce productivity.

Employees in such systems are more likely to disengage or retaliate through what psychologists call “passive resistance,” where they follow the rules exactly to prove a point.

It’s generally better for employers to build flexibility into their policies. Allowing an extra 10–15 minutes for closing procedures or planning an adjusted schedule during busy seasons can help prevent resentment and burnout.

Clear communication about expectations and compensation for real work done reinforces fairness and trust between staff and management.

From the employee’s side, documenting hours, instructions, and communications can offer protection if conflicts arise later. Staying calm and factual also helps if a manager’s policy seems unreasonable.

The employee’s reaction in this story might seem defiant, but it simply followed the manager’s words to the letter. The result highlights a simple truth about workplace rules: when leadership forgets the human side of labor, compliance becomes the most powerful form of protest.

Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

These Redditors praised standing firm against unfair “no overtime” management rules

Triplesfan − I had a boss who did something similar acting like a j__kass

when I ran over 15m and added it to my time sheet the week before.

It was a shining moment for me when both of us were on a conference call with network planning,

the clock on my computer hit the time the boss told me I had to be off the clock as there was ‘no overtime’,

hung up the phone in mid sentence, locked the computer, and started walking out.

The same boss catches me at the door and says ‘where you going?’

‘You told me no OT, so go ahead and finish the call and I’ll talk to you tomorrow’.

Funny thing was I was presenting to 20 network planners, including two directors.

Next day I was told by the second level to ignore my first level and if I ran over, to put OT on my time sheet.

1st10Amendments − Mike: Get back over here and finish checking out these customers.

OP: You’re authorizing overtime? Per regulations, I cannot do any work unless I’m clocked in.

Mike: Don’t worry about the clock. The customer comes first.

OP: There’s actually a LAW that says I can’t. There are also liability issues. No overtime, no problem. See you tomorrow.

Mike: Fine. Go clock in.

OP: Great! [Some time later, during which time Mike has been working the register.]

OP: The time clock won’t let me clock in. Seems it’s not my scheduled shift.

Can you override the clock, or am I going home?

By the way, I still cannot check people out while you fix the clock issue.

hollis_rae − I worked for a big retail company as a checker a few years ago.

They had this rule that you can not work over 6 hours without a 30 min lunch.

If you went a minute over 6 hrs without a break you would get in trouble.

Even though management was in charge of scheduling lunches, you would get in trouble if you didn't take a lunch.

One day I was scheduled for 6 hours. The manager that day didn't want me to take a lunch so he told me to clock out before 10.

We close at 10. I was the only checker scheduled to close.

So right at 10 about 7 people come up to check out with full carts. I walked away and clocked out.

He was very annoyed but it was his plan. I would have been the one in trouble if I stayed, not him.

This group shared stories of petty revenge after manipulative scheduling or overwork

DarthDarth_Binks_ − I worked in a grocery store for a while during high school and then a few years after.

We had an assistant manager that loved changing peoples schedules day of.

One day I decided to double check my schedule and saw that I was working 3-7.

I show up to work at 2:50 and the front end manager told me I wasn’t scheduled until 6.

I went in to look at the schedule and sure enough the assistant manager changed it. I went home and turned my phone off.

I was scheduled the next morning so when I came in the store manager called me into his office

and asked me to explain why I no called no showed the night before.

I told him if the assistant manager changes my schedule without telling me I’ll change my schedule without telling him.

The assistant manager got in trouble with corporate and my schedule was never changed again.

boogs_23 − I worked at Home Depot as over night stock.

We were understaffed and a really busy store so there was never enough time to get everything done.

Our i__ot manager would work us right up to the last minute

before clean up in some desperate attempt to accomplish everything.

Since I was one of 2 people with a forklift license, I always had to stay late to help tidy the place.

By Friday I would end up with almost 2 hours of overtime.

I was bitched at for going over 40 hours a couple weeks in a row, so I said f__k it.

Since he wanted to work me late every day, I just went home 2 hours early every Friday.

It was so entirely worth it. Absolutely amazing to get off at like 5 on a Friday morning and go home and get hammered.

9duce − I worked at subway for literally 4 hours when I was younger for the same thing.

It was my first day and I wasn't feeling it almost instantly but when my supervisor clocked me out

and said I had to stay to clean up and count bread and s__t I just laughed at her and just left.

Gotta nip it in the bud sometimes

These commenters recounted calmly refusing unpaid overtime and earning respect

perpetualsleep − I had a similar experience. I was closing shop alone

and the boss wanted me to count the drawer, clean, and finish jobs all while checking customers out.

On slow days, this could be done, but counting the drawer was impossible and too risky.

So, after hearing the complaint once too often, I told him that I'll start clocking out on time,

but I won't be able to close out the register.

He agreed and said he'd do it in the morning (he had the open shift and I closed).

A week later and I've got overtime approved and they tell me to make sure the doors are locked when I count the register.

Turns out the morning customers were eyeing the cash as he counted it was making him nervous.

[Reddit User] − I worked for an orange colored home improvement store that had a policy of no overtime.

A manager had a bad habit making me do asinine stuff.

One night she made me stay several hours fixing an end cap that had been set up wrong for years.

She realized that Sunday I was going to have to leave four hours early and no one was going to cover my section.

She says you need to stay and cover your section the overtime will be ok.

Having dealt with her in the past, more than likely the overtime was a lie plus I had already made plans with my wife.

I just said, "I have plans with my wife, I am sure you can figure it out."

These folks emphasized fair employers and smart professionalism over workplace drama

Conscript11 − I've worked for a small business for years and the owner is great.

Close at 0000 paid till 0030, every night. Also he doesn't believe in anything less than .5 hour increments.

Just round up or down at your own discretion, give and take. However if you're a const taker you won't last long.

ZenRage − Provide a statement for your HR file explaining your position

and that you were following his express instructions to the best of your ability.

Give HR, your supervisor, and, if relevant, your union steward a copy.

Would you have stayed to help the customers or walked out at 10 on the dot, too?

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

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