How much do we owe it to our bosses to let them know
where we are all the time?
For months, J.L., a reader from California, had been
planning to take two weeks off from work to travel with his daughter, a high
school junior, to the East Coast to tour college campuses. Both he and his
daughter had worked out the logistics, including flights, car rentals, staying
at the homes of relatives, and scheduling the tours.
But two weeks before they were slated to travel, J.L.'s
daughter was elected to serve as an officer for a national service organization
to which she belonged. As part of the duties, she was expected to attend a week-long
retreat in the Midwest with the rest of the officers, all expenses to be paid
by the service organization. The dates for the retreat conflicted with the
long-scheduled college tour schedule.
After agonizing over what to do, J.L.'s daughter decided
it was important to meet her obligation to the service organization. So she
asked J.L. if it would be OK to postpone the college tours. He agreed to the
change and managed to cancel the flights and rental car and to alert all the
family and friends that they wouldn't be visiting as originally scheduled.
Although his daughter was going to be away, J.L.'s son
thought it would be fun to get his father to some of his favorite hangout spots
during the week.
Typically, when J.L. is in town but not at work, he lets
his bosses know so they can reach him if they have any questions about the
projects in which he is working. Occasionally, this has resulted in J.L. going
into work even when he was supposed to have a day off to help get a project
completed. But this time he chose not to alert his bosses.
"I'm not telling the folks at work that I'm around,
letting them think I'm back East," he writes. "Is this devious,
wrong, showing a lack of character? You're the ethicist. Help me out
here."
There is nothing devious or wrong about J.L.'s decision
not to alert his bosses about his change in plans. He's taking time off. Where
that time is taken should not be a concern to J.L.'s bosses. If J.L. told his
bosses that they'd be able to reach him by cell when he's away, then nothing's
changed on that front. Taking time off of work does not show a lack of
character.
J.L. should not, however, lie about where he is. If he
gets a call, he doesn't need to volunteer his location coordinates, but he
shouldn't lie about them if directly asked. The right thing is for him to take
the time off coming to him, be honest when asked, and to continue to do good
work when he gets back to it. The right thing for his bosses would be to let
J.L. take the time off that's coming to him without bugging him while he's
away. What J.L. does on his time off should be up to J.L.
Jeffrey L. Seglin, author of The Simple Art of Business Etiquette: How to Rise to the Top by Playing Nice, is a lecturer in public policy and director of the communications program at Harvard's Kennedy School. He is also the administrator of www.jeffreyseglin.com, a blog focused on ethical issues.
Do you have ethical questions that you need answered? Send them to rightthing@comcast.net.
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