Nancyg56
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2005
- Messages
- 29,495
In the circumstance you describe with your work, it sounds like responding or answering a client's call could lead to a longer conversation or may require solving a problem, taking time out of your day off. I can understand why you wouldn't want to respond in your scenario. But in the scenario the OP described, it would have been very fast and easy for their co-worker to simply reply to the manager with a "no I can't come in" text and then they could have ignored any subsequent messages. Then the manager could have moved onto the next person to find coverage. While the co-worker may not be obligated to do that, to me it just seems like the professional and polite thing to do so as not to leave their employer hanging.
I usually make the choice to take the call but that is my own decision.
My dh is union and if they aren't scheduled to work but the weather or circumstances change the calls go out in order of seniority. Believe me, the bosses are not waiting. If within a specified time frame they don't reach one...they move on. The workers are not impacted if her do not return the call.
I have been I. That position of having to say no in previous jobs and believe me, there were times I was sorry I even picked up the phone. A text? I would have never even responded until hours later.