You were completely justified and correct in your response. Stick to your guns.
I Refused to Work on Saturdays — Now HR Will Cut My Salary

Workplace expectations are changing fast, and many employees are facing sudden schedule changes, overtime pressure, and pay disputes. Conversations about fair compensation, HR policies, and work-life balance are trending as workers rethink what’s reasonable. Recently, a reader sent us a letter about being asked to work Saturdays and then facing a salary cut.
Sally’s letter:
Dear Bright Side,
My company just started a new project and told us we’d need to work Saturdays too. I refused and said, “Weekends are for family.”
After that, HR hired a younger part-time worker to cover my Saturdays.
Everything seemed fine until the end of the month, when my salary was reduced. I confronted HR, and she said, “We’re paying someone else to do your Saturday work, so we’re cutting your salary and paying him from your money.”
What they didn’t know was that, over the past few months, 3 recruiters had already contacted me about joining other companies.
So, the next day, without telling anyone, I deleted part of the work I had already done on the project—roughly the same percentage as the pay cut.
Then I told HR I was quitting. I knew this would put them in a difficult position because the project is at a sensitive stage. HR said, “You can’t do this now. You can’t leave your part unfinished—we’re relying on it.”
I just told them to ask the part-timer to handle it, because I wasn’t going to work for free.
Now I’m second-guessing myself. Did I make the wrong choice by leaving so abruptly? I’ve spent 4 years at this company, and part of me feels like I’m throwing that away.
But cutting my salary crossed a red line for me, and maybe I’d be better off starting fresh somewhere else.
I need your advice and honest opinion, please.
Sally

Thank you, Sally, for your thoughtful letter. We really appreciate you sharing your experience so openly.
We have practical advice and next steps to help you protect yourself, respond to the salary cut, and move forward with confidence.
Secure Evidence, Then Escalate Smart.

Sounds like they already cut your pay be requiring Saturday work. That's assuming they weren't paying overtime. Either way, not a company anyone should work for. Ethically and legally you need to restore what you deleted. Bad behavior on the company's part does not mean you should do the same. You could potentially be sued for damages and destruction of company product.
Nonsense article. This breaks labor laws in all 50 states.
Ah, yes. American defaultism again. Where does it specify in the article which country this person is based in?
I don't think she's American either
Save your payslips, the “Saturdays required” message, and HR’s “pay him from your money” statement (screenshots/emails). Request a written breakdown of the deduction and the exact policy/contract clause they relied on.
Send the full packet to Finance and senior leadership (not HR) as a formal “unauthorized payroll deduction” case.
Remove the “Deleted Work” Risk.
Recreate or restore what you removed (from backups, drafts, exports, or your own copy) and submit it with a dated handover note.
Otherwise, they can shift the story from “illegal pay cut” to “misconduct,” and you lose leverage. Keep your position clean: the issue is the salary reduction, not the project output.
Turn Project Pressure Into Terms
Offer a short, paid transition plan: 2–4 weeks, weekdays only, at a premium rate, with clear deliverables.
Put it in writing: exact tasks, deadlines, and handover/training for the part-timer. If they reject paid terms, you leave immediately and stop contributing.
Use Recruiters as Your Exit Ramp.
Message the three recruiters today with a clear start window and ask for salary band + written offer steps.
Use your “immediate availability” as leverage to speed up interviews and offers. Once you sign, resign formally in writing and keep all communication documented.
Nelly was accidentally paid double salary. When HR asked her to repay the extra amount, she refused, saying she shouldn’t be held responsible for the company’s payroll mistake. Her case has gone viral, dividing opinions online and sparking a heated workplace money debate.
Comments
They have the total right to cut your salary! You haven't done your work fully and you expect rewards?!! Good thing that you are not fored yet
Look. If your working the weekends. That is time and half
If they are infact paying the part time gal out if your paycheck. Thats called stealing. You need to contact the other interested parties and cut a deal with of them. As for HR whinning of course their going to whine. They were under cutting you by taking money out of your paycheck and giving it another employee. Just for one days work. No one in their right mind would put with that sorta bull crap. So yes its time to move on. Let HR deal with the ness that they themselves created
Salaries are calculated using working days available, minus federal holidays and weekends (its 2080 hours in OR). Salaries are based off of a 40 hour work week, and adding a saturday to that, outside of contract, is illegal according to labor law (im not an attorney but im pretty sure this is the case). Added job responsibilities require renegotiation of original contract.
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