Huh, weird. I've mostly only worked in the northeast and every office I know of that runs on traditional office hours has expectations of 9-5. Lots of people don't take a full hour for lunch or eat at their desks but no one says anything if people do go out to get lunch, run errands, etc., nor are people expected to arrive before 9.I've always worked in either the deep South or the Midwest, and have been a salaried professional for every full-time job I've ever had. The "face-time" expectation was a minimum of 8 hours of WORKING time each day to account for a 40-hour workweek; if you are salaried you are expected to add extra time onto your day to account for your lunch break, so most people do not take an hour except in unusual situations. 30 minutes is very much the norm for everyone, even executives unless they are having a "lunch meeting." The expectation is that if you expect to be able to regularly walk out the door at 5 pm, then you'll have to regularly arrive no later than 8:30.
IME it is usually spelled out in the company handbook what the number of minimum hours in the unclassified workweek are, and that lunch does NOT count. (It also more often that not explains that you cannot choose to skip lunch in order to "legally" arrive later or leave earlier than usual.)
Executives or people with a lot to do, etc., may choose to come in early, but I used to temp in college and all the offices (and there were many, in very varied areas and types of businesses) all ran on a standard 9-5 expectation. As a temp you weren't paid for lunch but could only take half an hour instead of an hour if you wanted - but still worked 9-5.
See, this is doubly weird because while I'm sure some shift work does hold to that, here a lot of shift work is 8-4, 4-12, 12-8.Many medical jobs are, because that is the usual "day shift" on the hospital clock.
Speaking of regional differences....I worked those hours at one job and I HATED it. Wicked long day.
I read that, kept scrolling down the page and then scrolled back up to check you were near Boston. 


I always thought "9-5" was misleading, too. In Southern California and in Colorado, people work at least 8 hours a day (in a typical office job). Hours are usually 8-5, or 8:30-5:30, etc. We do not get paid to eat lunch, whether salaried or hourly. Exactly as NotUrsula explained it.
. They said it's because the commute is so bad in NY.
Maybe compared to a small town, but I was working in L.A. at the time! We spent hours commuting, too, but we did it in cars. At least on the train/subway, they could read, pay bills, sleep, etc.
We get a lunch, We just don't get paid for it. It's personal time, we go out and chat with friends over lunch, run errands, or surf the 'net while we eat at our desk. We're not working, so it would never occur to us to expect to get paid for that time.

? "Excuse me, person"? "Hey you"?? Run up and tap them on the shoulder??