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Engineer complies with manager's insistence to never stay past 5:00 PM by pausing an imminent project at the end of the day: 'Greg had explicitly told me to leave even if the building was on fire'

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  • A mechanical engineer wears a red shirt and a hard hat at work.
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  • Since you want me out at five then I am out at five

    So I work in this engineering firm doing BIM coordination and mechanical design. It is the kind of job where things are mostly predictable until a project hits the submittal phase and then everything turns into a dumpster
  • fire. My direct manager who we will call Greg is one of those guys who thinks management is just looking at a clock and a spreadsheet without actually understanding how a 3D model is built or why a clash detection report takes time to run. For
  • context I usually stayed an extra fifteen or twenty minutes if I was in the middle of a complex pipe routing or if a contractor was screaming for a fix. I did not mind because it made my mornings easier and kept the projects moving. Greg however started getting a bug in his ear about "overtime optimization" even
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  • though I am salaried and was not even asking for extra pay. He just hated seeing me at my desk after 5:00 PM because it made him look like he was not managing my workload correctly or something.
  • He gave me a couple of "friendly reminders" about leaving on time which I ignored because I actually care about not letting my team down.
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  • Cheezburger Image 10627776512
  • Last Wednesday Greg finally snapped. I was finishing up a critical HVAC layout for a hospital project that had to go out the next morning. If the ducts are not aligned with the structural beams the whole thing is a mess. I was at my desk at 5:05 PM when Greg walked out of his office. He did not ask what I was doing or if the hospital project was ready.
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  • He just stood there with his arms crossed and gave me this formal lecture about how I was "defying a direct managerial directive" regarding my schedule. He told me that if he saw me at my desk one minute past five again he would write me up for insubordination and report it to HR as a failure to follow office protocols. He actually said "I do
  • protocols. He actually said "I do not care if the building is on fire you leave when the clock hits 17:00." I told him I was just trying to make sure the submittal was clean but he cut me off and pointed at the door.
  • Enter the malicious compliance. I decided that if Greg wanted a robot who follows a clock then that is exactly what he would get.
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  • I set a loud alarm on my phone for 4:59 PM. Thursday was the big deadline for the hospital job. I had about twenty major clashes left to resolve in the Navisworks model. Usually I would stay until 6:00 to make sure the MEP trades had a clear path. At 4:55
  • PM I was right in the middle of rerouting a massive 24-inch chilled water line that was clipping through a main structural column. It is a delicate process because if you move it one way you hit the electrical trays and if you move it the other you are in the ceiling of the operating room.
  • My alarm goes off. I do not finish the move. I do not hit save. I do not sync the model to the central file which is BIM 101. If you do not sync nobody else can see your changes and the model stays "locked" for those elements. I
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  • literally just stood up grabbed my bag and walked past Greg's office. He looked pleased and gave me a little nod. I did not even look back.
  • The manager goes through items on a checklist as he tours an industrial factory.
  • Friday morning was a total bloodbath. I walked in at 8:00 AM to find Greg and the Senior Partner standing by my desk. The contractor had tried to pull the latest model at 6:00 AM for the site meeting and found that the main chilled water line was literally hovering in the middle of a hallway and half the mechanical
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  • floor was locked by my user ID because I never synced. The Senior Partner was livid because the client was threatening backcharges for the delay. Greg tried to throw me under the bus immediately saying that I must have been "slacking off" or "disorganized" the day before. I
  • just sat down opened my log and showed the Senior Partner the timestamp of my last action. Then I turned to Greg and said loud enough for the whole floor to hear that I wanted to finish the sync but I was worried about the "direct managerial directive" and
  • the threat of a formal write-up for insubordination. I told the Partner that Greg had explicitly told me to leave even if the building was on fire. The look on Greg's face was priceless as he tried to explain that "common sense should have applied." I reminded him that he specifically told me common sense did not matter and only the clock did. The
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  • Partner told Greg to go to his office and I was told to "just do whatever it takes to fix it." I still leave at 5:00 PM sharp now but Greg does not even look at my desk when he leaves.

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