I Refused to Take Video Calls on Weekends, Now HR Changed Their Policy

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month ago
I Refused to Take Video Calls on Weekends, Now HR Changed Their Policy

Balancing work and personal life has become harder than ever, especially when companies expect employees to be available around the clock. What may seem like a small refusal to work outside office hours can sometimes trigger big consequences at the workplace. Recently, one of our readers sent us a letter about experiencing this exact situation with HR.

Dear Bright Side,

I work in a design company. We recently took on a big project with a tight deadline, so we need to work more hours. HR told us, “We respect your weekends, so we’ll just ask you to do video calls instead of coming in.”

No one said a word. But I replied, “Sorry, my weekends are for family only. I can’t be doing work.” HR smiled politely. That’s when some of my colleagues started to agree with me.

The next day, everyone froze when HR sent us all an email. It said:

“Dear Colleagues,

As we move forward with an important project under tight deadlines, we ask for your full commitment over the coming months. To support this, we require your physical presence in the office on Saturdays and, if necessary, part-time on Sundays.

This temporary adjustment will help us meet our shared goals and demonstrate your dedication to delivering excellence as a team.

If you are unable to participate in weekend work, please inform us as soon as possible so that we can make the necessary arrangements.

Best regards,
HR / Management Team”

Now, everybody sees me as the villain because I am seen as the reason the company is dragging us in on weekends instead of just doing video calls.

Was I wrong to stand up for myself and my colleagues?
Laura

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Refused to take an hour call so now y’all gotta go in … seems about right … you didnt stand up for your co workers .. you instead ruined it for them.. wtg

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Thank you for sharing your story, Laura. What you’re facing isn’t just about weekend work — it’s about how one honest refusal spiraled into stricter demands for the entire team, leaving you singled out as the “cause.”

Here is our advice to you.

Reframe Yourself as a Catalyst, Not the Villain.

Everyone needs to stuck to their guns. If everyone refuses to go on in weekends, HR will have to deal with it. They should have gone about it completely differently and ASKED if anyone was willing to help get the project over the line (and be duely compensated). You get more bees with honey than venom

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Your colleagues blame you for the stricter rules, but in reality, HR used your refusal as an excuse to tighten control.

Action: Gently remind your teammates that one employee’s comment doesn’t dictate company policy. Say something like, “I only spoke up for myself. Management decided to escalate — that’s on them, not me.” This shifts the focus back where it belongs.

Document the Chain of Events Clearly.

Time to start working to rule. No early or late stay backs overtime on weekdays either. Completely no show for weekends. Management need to hire more staff, not steal free labour/wages from existing staff. This sounds like a nasty loyalty exercise from someone paid 5 times your salary. Start looking for another job because this one sounds like the beginning of a ego driven train wreck.

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Right now, it looks like you triggered the policy, but the truth is that HR made the decision.

Action: Write down the original exchange and save the follow-up email. If resentment grows or if HR tries to penalize you, having proof of how things unfolded will protect you from being scapegoated.

Turn the Situation Into a Collective Discussion.

Maybe should be telling HR that maybe they need to learn how to learn time management.
Cause I bet hr won't be there on weekends.
Cause team means everyone from custodians. Mail clerk, secretary, to hr and jr/sr level management.
This is why society sucks today because people choose career/money over family.

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Since others initially agreed with you but now blame you, they’re afraid of HR’s power more than your words.

Action: Suggest raising concerns as a group — perhaps by proposing flexible weekday hours instead of forced weekends. By framing it as a team proposal, you stop being “the lone complainer” and instead become the one who sparked a constructive alternative.

Protect Your Future Beyond This Company.

If your workplace punishes honesty and piles extra work onto employees under the guise of “team spirit,” it may not align with your long-term well-being.

Action: Quietly update your resume, keep an eye out for companies with healthier cultures, and use this job as a stepping stone. Sometimes the best response to unfair treatment is planning your exit strategically.

Tonia has also faced big tension at work after she refused a job promotion. This is the reason why.

Comments

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You forgot to mention the most important part. Check your labor laws. Many states in the United States make it illegal to work more than five days in a row. Those meetings, if mandatory, are work and need to be paid and included as time worked.

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I have never heard of this in my fifty years of working. Checking labor laws will show you exactly how little protection employees have I do not believe your statement is true at all.

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Sorry, but I don't see the problem in just an hour or two of Zoom meeting. Why not do it, what's the big deal ? She's beiing a drama queen

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Perfectly said, hr was trying to be considerate of their time off. They reply just showed HR that it is time to trim the dead weight.

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There’s always a better job. That’s what this generation has realized, and it’s why employers are crying about people just up and quitting. I encourage it, the whole team should quit and go to a competitor.

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So do you also not see the problem with the job paying her an hour or two while she’s taking a nap in her office? They should pay all the employees for extra time and let them sleep on it stop being dramatic.

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Then you don't care about your job controlling your life. If you sign up for a 9-5 m-f job and after awhile they decide that no, you need to work 12-9pm, and you have young kids to pick up from school, you should just eat that, for the privilege of them giving you a job?

I worked at a small company that did exactly that. Changed policy that any time they needed you to work outside of the normal hours, they only had to give you 24 hours notice. You had to give them two weeks notice to take time off. This change due to the fact they made me travel for work on a weekend with no notice, knowing I had to be back for school Monday night. Then come Monday morning, they try to strongarm me into staying, instead I drove the rental car back the four hours and left them short one worker. They promised the client something and expected me to miss school for their failure.

When the time came for this new "contract", my boss and I (our section only had three people and was the most cash productive section they had) told the other employees to threaten to quit if they didn't rescind their new policy. The company would be unable to afford that as these were all people doing jobs that only those people knew how to do, and if they quit, the product lines were dead.

Well, time came, the other employees all caved and signed the contract. We refused. Got "laid off" with severance lol. Went to state got unemployment. Company tried to claim we were fired. State sided with us. Got our unemployment, partially paid by company. Then company went out of business. Everyone that could have prevented the policy implementation but chose work over life, instead lost their jobs a couple months later.

The company could have avoided all that by simply playing by the same rules they wanted to enforce on us, but those business guys knew better! Lol

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No they want free labor forcing company growth on the back of the worker without proper planning time management if the project to to big for time given someone bid the job incorrectly that's usually a higher up than the worker completing task progress by mistreating ur employee not her problem. I'm a team player but place blame where it belongs the person who bid the job the time line given and amount paid. If this is their procedure definitely find a different place to work

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Sure! Let's do a zoom chat as I stand in line at my local amusement park, or while we have appetizers at my restaurant date with my husband. And I am sure you will be okay with me muting for a sec while I cheer on the sidelines of my daughter's soccer game.

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