Totally unfair and a nasty thing to do. I live in Australia and when I worked (disability pension now) the Christmas parties we had were paid for by the company not us it was a thankyou for the work we did all year for them
I Refuse to Pay for a Steakhouse Party as a Vegan—Then Got HR Involved

This is Amelia’s story.
Dear Bright Side,
I recently became a vegan and made sure the entire office knew that it was happening. All my coworkers supported me and tried their best to help me on my journey. But my boss recently did something that made me question all their motives.
For our end of year function, my boss booked my team in for a steakhouse party, even though he was well aware that I’m vegan. When I asked him about it, he shrugged and said, “Oh come on, this isn’t something you’re serious about. You can have steak for one night. It’s just like a diet anyway.”
So I kept quiet and on the day I just ordered a $12 salad, since it was the only thing on the menu that was vegan-friendly. Later, when the bill came, my boss said that it would be split evenly, which came out to $75 per person.
I told my boss that it was unfair since I only had a salad and a drink. I refused to pay such a high price for something I didn’t have. So I did a quick calculation and only paid for what I had consumed. My boss just smiled, and I left without saying another word.

An event where a staff member is required to pay should not be mandatory and the idea of your boss trying to have your salary docked is a wage violation so no, I would not feel bad. Furthermore I deal with similar situations where staff funded meals or events only offer a salad for vegetarians and vegans ( I am a 10 year plus Vegan) is a joke. Salads are Not a meal sans a protein, vegan or not, and it becomes annoying when non vegans believe it is sufficient for us. I have learned to bring my lunch or meal to such events otherwise I am hungry with nothing substantial to eat.
We pay for christmas party tickets in Canada we also pay for our spouse to attend as well. Its nationwide. No real issues with it, we initial in our hire packages we are aware of this. Upholds in court should an employee press their luck
That is an ignorant way to treat ANYONE, especially an employee. If the company cares so little, about the people who are keeping their businesses viable, then the customer is next. If you are PAYING FOR A PARTY, them YOU should be able to at least EAT food that YOU WANT.
I'd skip that mandatory "party".
2 days later, I got to my office and saw a letter on my desk. I paled when I saw that it was from HR. They demanded an emergency meeting to discuss my behavior. I went to their office and found out that my boss had complained about the year-end function.
He told them that I was “refusing to reimburse team expenses.” Apparently, he wanted to have a disciplinary hearing and for the remainder of the bill to be deducted from my salary. I told them what really happened, knowing that I wasn’t in the wrong.
Now my boss is the one facing a disciplinary hearing, and I can’t help but feel guilty about it. So Bright Side, what do you think? Should I have paid the bill? Or was it right for me to stand my ground?
Regards,
Amelia H.
Some advice from our Editorial team.

Why are you asking such a stupid question, when you know you are in the right? Never ever agree to bill splitting.
Dear Amelia,
Thank you for reaching out and sharing your story with us.
You were right to stand your ground, and the guilt you’re feeling is exactly what people like your boss rely on to avoid consequences.
This wasn’t about a shared team expense, it was about your boss deliberately dismissing a clearly stated ethical choice, choosing a venue that excluded you, and then expecting you to subsidize everyone else’s steaks to “keep the peace.”
The moment he waved off your veganism as “not serious” and framed it as a diet you could break for convenience, he crossed from poor planning into disrespect, and the salary deduction threat turned it into an abuse of authority.
You didn’t embarrass him, escalate publicly, or refuse to pay altogether; you calmly paid for what you consumed and left, which is the most reasonable response possible. If there’s fallout now, it’s not because you refused to overpay for a salad.
It’s because his actions didn’t hold up when HR looked at them in daylight. Feeling guilty doesn’t mean you were wrong, it just means you’re empathetic, even when the other party wasn’t.
In all senses, Amelia is in the right. She should not be expected to pay more than triple the amount she had actually spent just because her boss thought it was fair.
But she isn’t the only one with issues in the workplace. Another one of our readers reached out to share their experience. Read their story here: I Refused to Follow My Boss’s Unethical Order — Then Discovered the Company’s Dark Secret.
Comments
Honestly, if it were me, I would have just stayed home, or if I wanted to enjoy the party with my co-workers I would have gone and either eaten before I went or asked the waitress for a separate check for my salad and drink. This way my order was not on the same check as everyone's steak dinner.
Stay home. Eat upu vegan food. Agree boss not have right to have people psy but why go if you don’t want to be around meat!
It doesn't sound much like a year-end party hosted by the company if the people being hosted are required to pay their own meals and don't seem to be able to opt out, I have the sneaking suspicion that the bosses dinner ( that he decided everyone was having) may be part of that $75 portion that everyone else was paying - HR should definitely take a close look at this little kettle of fish cuz I think it's been left in the sun too long. Even at a steak house there's no way everyones meals would be the same price - ribs, steaks, burgers, surf and turf etc and different sides to boot. A year-end treat from the company that you have to pay for yourself or get docked, isn't much of a treat.
NOT NO BUT HELL F_CKING NO you were completely JUSTIFIED in your actions and standing your ground you should have told your boss if he needed help paying the bill for the dinner maybe he should have had a salad and a drink as well
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