I Refused Extra Work, and Now HR Is Cutting My Salary

People
4 weeks ago
I Refused Extra Work, and Now HR Is Cutting My Salary

Workplace conflict and unfair treatment are becoming more common as companies cut costs and push employees harder. Many workers are dealing with HR issues, salary cuts, and rising pressure in toxic job environments. Recently, we received a letter from a reader who found herself in exactly this kind of situation.

The letter:

Dear Bright Side,

My company laid off staff to “cut costs.” Then they made me and my remaining colleagues take the extra workload, with no raise.

I refused to do it. HR said, “Then we’ll reduce your salary — you should be grateful you still have a job.” I just smiled.

The next day, I came in and revealed that I was quitting. I told HR, “I got a job offer from a competitor, and I’m taking it. At least they don’t expect me to work for free.”

Then I added, “Being grateful doesn’t mean being taken for granted.”

But that’s not the end...

Everybody froze in horror when they discovered that I had been talking with the management of the new company about hiring 2 of my other colleagues too. They’re expanding and needed more staff, so my colleagues sent their résumés and were accepted.

We’ve been worried for months about layoffs at our company, so when management started expecting us to do unpaid work, leaving became the only logical option.

Now the office is in chaos. I’m being blamed for convincing my colleagues to quit, and management knows that losing 3 senior employees, on top of the layoffs they already made, will leave the company badly understaffed.

Now I’m being called “unprofessional,” and HR told me I would “regret my decision” because this was supposedly my chance to stay loyal to the company I’ve been with for nine years and “eventually earn a promotion.”

Did I make the wrong choice?

Should I have stayed, been patient, and endured everything just because I’ve already invested so many years into this company?

Heather

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Threaten you with lowering your salary and then say if you work hard enough, you MIGHT get a promotion. They are the unprofessional ones. You have acted very professionally by finding a new job. You have also acted loyally by helping your colleagues to find a better job. I often wonder in these situations, "Has management taken on extra duties or a pay cut?" Loyalty and Professionalism are words that seem to be thrown around a lot as a guilt measure when, in reality, they themselves are not acting loyally or professionally.

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Thank you, Heather, for writing to us and trusting us with your story. You shared your experience with clarity and courage, and it’s clear how much pressure you’ve been under. We’ve looked closely at everything you went through, and here are our tips based on your story.

Treat HR’s Comments as Panic, Not Reality.

Reducing their pay for the work THEY ARE ALREADY DOING, BUT CAN'T DO MORE US BULLSHIT. IF HR was given EXTRA WORK, you can be DAMN SURE THAT THEY WOULD HET PAID MORE FOR IT.

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HR calling you “unprofessional” is their fear talking, not an accurate reflection of your actions. Losing 3 senior employees after layoffs puts them in survival mode. Blaming you is easier than admitting their poor decisions created this crisis.

Rejecting unpaid work and salary threats isn’t misconduct — it’s self-respect. Their “you’ll regret this” line is emotional pressure, not truth. Don’t let their panic shape how you view your own professionalism.

See Your Exit as Strategy, Not Betrayal.

You didn’t quit impulsively; you moved toward a company that is stable and expanding. That is a smart career decision, not disloyalty. Staying only because you invested nine years is the sunk cost fallacy — a trap companies rely on to keep employees stuck.

They broke loyalty first when they demanded free labor and threatened your pay. Your new employer values you and your colleagues based on merit. That alone proves your judgment was sound.

Stop Owning Responsibility That Isn’t Yours.

Your colleagues chose to apply for the new jobs themselves; you didn’t pressure or manipulate them. They saw the same warning signs you did — layoffs, unpaid workload, and weak leadership. Adults choosing better opportunities isn’t your moral burden. Management wants to pin the blame on you because shifting responsibility is easier than fixing the workplace culture.

Remind yourself that you didn’t cause the chaos — you escaped it. Their staffing crisis is the consequence of their own choices, not yours.

Focus on the Opportunity You Gained, Not the Guilt They Want You to Feel.

Hi Grace, I don't know if you'll ever see these comments. I just want to know when I do leave them they aren't personal they're just my reactions. I believe your spot on with this response. I've been a very similar situation three times in my life the first time I was caught unaware as a stockbroker and I was let go right after 9/11 in fact after 9/11 you couldn't trade for about 2 months so I had 6 months to get a certain amount of accounts and a certain amount of assets and one third of the time was already gone. When the time freed up it was Christmas time so there was no work being done then and I was let go the day after super bowl in 2002. The second time I was employed by a healthcare payer and I knew they were having layoffs and I knew in January of the year I was laid off I'd be getting laid off because they had a massive meeting and a bunch of us weren't invited but all the other employees were but at the same time they were giving us the work from other employees that had supposedly voluntarily left. That day I went home told my late wife who freaked out and I said hey I'm taking the night off to relax and then tomorrow I'm going to do my resume and not go to bed till it's posted on monster. Yeah it was a long time ago. I had a job within 2 weeks in fact when she got up on Friday because I got laid off on a Wednesday I did my resume on Thursday and by 9:00 a.m. Friday I had seven interviews lined up over the next two weeks. The third time was just recently and I knew there was going to be layoffs but at the same time because we had to do extra work I took it because it gave me project management experience at a very high level publicly exposed series of projects which I was successfully able to complete and used to get a new job within 3 weeks of being laid off. And I was actually giving two months notice of the layoff. So the employee is nothing to feel guilty about layoffs are coming they were concerned about losing their job and they decided to jump ship they have the right to do that in fact management will often employ these tactics so employees will voluntarily leave to cut back on layoffs. I used to work for the bureau of Labor statistics on the es202 program I was seeing your economist and you can actually find my name in the employment wages annual averages from the 1990s. That being said there was a program in the office of compensation and working conditions called the mass layoff statistics project and that was a requirement of the UI program in States that you had to give them notice if you were going to lay off more than a hundred employees in a calendar year. We don't collect that anymore but the notification requirements still exist because the implications it has to the UI trust funds.

As a former leader of the department of Labor employee union which I did an addition to my full-time job hr's comments are very unprofessional and highly illegal depending on the state you're in. That constitutes a real and present threat that is liable under the law in most States. I would recommend getting a lawyer after notifying your new employee that HR has threatened you for leaving your job and taking a position with them. I experience something very similar for a company that was based out of Philadelphia and my position was in Massachusetts it was a part-time position and they threatened me. Now I'm from Philadelphia and my father was in a position of political power at the time and I was able to deal with it legally and quickly but a lot of people aren't and it's very important to realize that when you're threatened that you need to notify and keep records of everything. In any case you did an excellent response and I think it's a great textbook example and I wish you a very wonderful day and a happy Christmas

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Of course they wanted you to pick up the extra slack. Cooperations over pay their executives and shit on lower level employees. How about to keep the staff those exec's cut their salaries, God forbid that .

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The new company trusted your skills, your leadership, and even hired people you recommended. That’s a huge vote of confidence and shows your professional influence. Your old company used fear, guilt, and threats; your new one offers growth and respect.

When HR says you “threw away a chance,” what they mean is you stopped letting them underpay you. Promotions shouldn’t be promised only after you accept exploitation. You didn’t walk away from a future, you walked toward a better one.

Paula is facing a different kind of workplace pressure. When her manager suddenly fell ill, she was told to come in on her day off to “save” a major project — a classic case of toxic job demands and unreasonable expectations. She refused, but here is what happened next.

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WHY are people losing their work ETHICS these days?! if there is extra work why not do it and be a crybaby?!!! Instead of taking the time and energy to share your story you could've done the extra work!

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Wow. We work to support ourselves and our family. As someone working at a growing business, I can tell you that there is a limit to how much I can physically and mentally do (we are thankfully in the position to be hiring and creating new positions). Leaving now before an emotional/psychological breakdown is a smart move, and shows you know yourself and what you can handle. The employer also needs to know there are limits. . . I mean, have they been taking more work themselves, or just dumping it on the "lower" employees?

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No you should not of stayed and you or anyone else for that matter should not be forced to work unpaid. They were trying to force you to do the work of multiple people without the compensation that comes with it. They decided to try and cut your wages because you stuck up for yourself so at that point you had no choice but to look elsewhere for a job. Loyalty means nothing if you can't afford to live or pay bills. Loyalty is also a 2 way street they showed you what they think of you and your colleagues so why would you continue to show them loyalty.
I hope you are much happier in your new job you deserve to work somewhere that values you

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“You”ll regret this” isn’t emotional pressure. ITS A THREAT, and should be reported to law enforcement and a report created. Yes it’s a civil matter, but create a paper trail, and talk to a lawyer.

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