The amount of threads where people virtue rage and tell posters to report their bosses to HR, with only the most minimal context, truly continues to baffle me. You all know nothing except 1 side of the story, and that briefly told.
How many times have heard people complain about a call they received while on PTO and everyone jumps in to condemn the manager... Maybe the person complaining about being asked to work while on PTO takes lots of PTO, maybe their boss has only ever reached out off hours in very time sensitive instances, and maybe the only time they did that the person has now responded with a snotty dismissal that "they don't get paid enough for that" or some other passive aggressive excuse?
Maybe the person didn't give very good advance notice and/or didn't plan very well for coverage in their absence? (or maybe none of this is true, but mainly my point being none of us really KNOW, so wanting to bury the boss in an HR controversy is a disgusting overreaction)
Seriously, have y'all been in the bosses' shoes in this scenario? Ever had an employee that didn't follow basic etiquette re: accountability, or didn't seem to take any ownership/initiative? People saying you should NEVER work when you're off are being idealistic/unrealistic, this is true for ANY white collar industry and suggesting otherwise is just disingenuous IMHO. Personally I do take my laptop with me on vacation, and yes I do generally expect to work a few hours a week even if I'm on PTO.
This isn't demanded of me by anyone, it isn't because my firm is toxic or because I need to report my boss to HR or whatever.
I just care about my job, my team and projects, and want to stay on top of things as much as possible.And no, I don't demand of any team members to do this. I always tell people to take their PTO whenever they want, just give notice and plan appropriately for the items you're responsible for, and we'll work around it. I (almost) never ask anyone to work on weekends or PTO, but sure it has happened a few times, to a very limited extent, over the years.
If someone obstinately refused to help when we really needed them, of course I wouldn't retaliate, but yes that would make me question their work ethic and whether I could rely on them for increasing levels of responsibility in the future.Saying stuff like "this isn't open heart surgery", "nobody is gonna die", etc etc is just asinine and makes it quite obvious you aren't very invested in the team or your own career.
Which is fine, sure, work to live and all that, more power to you!... But this doesn't exactly scream "promote me into leadership positions".
If you don't think that's realistic, again I just think you may be comparatively inexperienced or naive....