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Manager Refuses To Help Short-Staffed Team, Learns The Hard Way About Child Labor Laws

by Layla Bui
November 2, 2025
in Social Issues

Few things are more satisfying than watching a bad boss face the consequences of their own laziness. One Redditor, a teen dishwasher at the time, was told to “just stay late” after being left to clean up an impossible mountain of dishes.

But thanks to child labor laws, they couldn’t and didn’t. When they clocked out right at 11 p.m., the manager was forced to finally get her hands dirty. By the time she finished, it was 1:15 a.m., poetic justice served on a platter of suds and exhaustion.

Sometimes the best revenge isn’t loud, it’s lawful, perfectly timed, and completely satisfying

Manager Refuses To Help Short-Staffed Team, Learns The Hard Way About Child Labor Laws
not the actual photo

'Manager wouldn’t help when short staffed. Had to do the work herself at the end of the night?'

When I was in high school, I had a part time job working at a local restaurant.

One day, I came in and was scheduled to wash dishes, no big deal.

I walked into the back and came to find out that the morning shift did not have a dishwasher

therefore there was a mountain of dishes. No bueno. On top of all of that, we got slammed that night.

As a minor, I was required to take a 30 minute break in order to work my full shift (4-10pm I believe).

As I clocked out for my break I asked my manager if she could have someone cover my position

while I was on break to prevent an even worse situation than was already at hand.

She responded ‘Won’t be able to. You’ll just have to stay late and finish it’.

An important thing to keep in mind is that this manager was notoriously lazy and unhelpful.

She never lended a helping had to get things done faster.

She would rather stay 3 hours past close sitting in the office waiting for us to finish our closing duties

instead of coming out and helping and getting everything done in a timely manner.

She was also not very familiar with child labor laws in Ohio.

Since I was a minor, not only did I have to take a 30 minute break, I also could not work past 11pm on school nights.

So after clocking back in from my break, I resumed washing the mountain of dishes that had accumulated.

I took my time and didn’t rush to get everything cleaned, but also wasn’t going extremely slow on purpose.

10:59 rolls around and I walk into the office to tell her that I am leaving. She asked ‘got everything done?’

‘Nope!’ I said. ‘It’s a Wednesday night. Can’t work past 11pm. Labor laws.

I left the water turned on for you. There’s still a lot left!’

The look on her face was priceless.

I clocked out with the biggest smile on my face, knowing that

she was going to have to leave the office and do something for once.

Asked another manager the next day to see what time she clocked out. 1:15 am!

The OP reports that while working a scheduled dish-washing shift, the morning staff failed to fill the role and, during a busy evening service, the manager refused to cover the minor’s 30-minute break, instead telling the OP she must stay late and finish the piled dishes.

The manager, who is described by the OP as habitually inactive in helping the team, ended up staying in the office while the OP clocked out right at the legal cutoff and left the remaining work for the manager to face.

On one side of the story, the manager may claim that in short-staffed conditions, everyone needs to pull extra weight, especially in a service business at peak hours. She may argue the OP’s break would further burden the team and delay closing.

On the other side, the OP, a minor employee, felt placed in an unfair position, denied the legally required relief and left doing the workload while the manager stood back. The motivation for the OP appears to be adherence to labor laws, fairness and perhaps a silent protest of managerial neglect.

The manager’s motivation may stem from prioritizing the business’s running close tasks, lack of oversight of minor labor regulations, and a possible avoidance of hands-on leadership.

This raises a broader issue of how workplaces handle minor employees, especially in environments where staffing is unpredictable. Under Ohio Department of Commerce regulations, minors may not be employed more than five consecutive hours without a 30-minute rest break.

Furthermore, every employer in Ohio must provide a rest period. When such provisions are ignored, it isn’t just an individual grievance, it reflects a systemic undervaluing of the labor protections afforded to younger workers.

According to national figures, minors in the U.S. accounted for 6.8 % of the workforce in retail and service in recent years, and reports indicate that schedules and oversight in those sectors often fail to align with regulation.

(For instance, the U.S. Department of Labor notes that minors may not work during school hours and have restrictions on night work.) When managers sideline such protections, it erodes trust and can embolden other compliance lapses.

In terms of advice, the OP should consider speaking with a neutral HR representative (if one exists) or a labor-law advisor about the instance, strictly documenting the date, time-clock records and break requests.

They might explore whether the shift actually extended legally beyond permitted hours for a minor in the given context, as well as whether the manager’s refusal breached the 30-minute rest rule.

If comfortable, the OP can gently raise the issue with the manager, requesting future adherence to breaks and clearer staffing-expectations.

More broadly, if the work environment regularly disrespects labor standards, the OP should evaluate whether staying in that job aligns with their long-term goals and well-being. Inviting discussion with peers or on the job can also reveal whether this was an isolated slip or part of a pattern.

Check out how the community responded:

These commenters praised dishwashers and hardworking staff

sparkly_awesome − I always had the most respect for the people who worked the dish pit.

Whenever I had to pitch in as a manager or a server (that silverware ain't gonna roll itself)

I hated that feeling of being o__rwhelmed and sweaty and dirty...

Shotbrother − Everyone depends on a dishwasher in a restaurant. So it's not very wise to be rude to them

BKCowGod − Zero respect here for managers who won't get their hands dirty.

I came up through the ranks and I absolutely expect to be doing any job from top to bottom as needed.

That's why I get paid more, nothing magic about my job.

This group shared leadership wisdom, stressing that good managers lead by example, support their staff

riddus − Here’s a secret to being a successful and respected manager

Your staff is not there to serve YOU, rather you are there to support the staff.

Person can’t make it to work on time- you help them arrange a ride or pick them up yourself.

Person can’t do the job correctly- you train them yourself.

Work in the outdoors- you go on runs for cold drinks or hand warmers.

You lead by service and example and anyone who would tell you differently isn’t doing it right.

Nobody will willingly do things for you if they know you wouldn’t do for them.

nunya__bidness − A manager who won't do any job that they assign to someone else is useless.

When I had people working for me in a manufacturing environment,

if I wasn't at a meeting or doing a required task I would take the hardest, dirtiest job available.

Then when anyone came to me and complained my first response was

do you want to do what I'm doing so I can go do your job. Most people said no thank you.

StateofWA − Best manager I ever had was in the basement helping housekeeping mop a flooded bathroom the first time I met him.

This was a 125 room hotel in the middle of a city, he could have given that job to anyone,

but he had his sleeves rolled up and was working his b__t off. That kind of thing leaves an impression.

Both recounted personal workplace experiences showing the contrast between hands-on leadership and lazy management

[Reddit User] − Was the senior assistant manager for a Taco Bell with the big tumbler sink and I made it a point to do dishes regularly.

Your staff won't respect you if you lead from the back and ask them to do things you aren't willing to do.

I remember bugging out one night because someone tossed two french knives in the sink with it tumbling.

Found the first one without losing a finger thankfully.

That was one of my more rare moments as management for sure.

Whole place went silent while I turned three different shades of red and started shouting.

Afaik nobody ever tossed sharps in the sink again lol.

[Reddit User] − I had one of my bosses recently who asked me what I had left to do

because "I'm not staying past 7 I wanna get out of here." (I have keys but she technically can't leave before I finish)

So I told her what I had left, laundry wasn't going to be ready until close to close and there was a lot to button up.

Still had to sweep, wipe down tables, restock a thing or two, and get that laundry folded.

And I stressed to her that I was NOT going to leave the morning shift with nothing and make them scramble to get ready.

She had everything she needed to be done finished already.

So I'm just going at my regular pace (my shift is supposed to end 30 minutes past close).

She sat at the desk on her phone clearly miffed that I was still working.

If she had lifted a single finger to help me, we would've been out real close to 7 like she wanted.

Part of being a manager is stepping up when your team needs help.

This user bluntly condemned poor managers who fail to help their teams

[Reddit User] − She doesn’t deserve that position.

dbp0911 − Sounds like the majority of my managers in FF.

Only one actually does work because it’s left to be done.

Another will do it if it’s required and clearly won’t be getting done.

I do have one manager who busts her a** on everything but she’s a rare gem.

The other 5 don’t do s__t unless it’s rush.

And even then it’s only what’s required of the position during rush

Would you have done the same? Or stayed late just to avoid the fallout?

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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