BlueMax wrote:
It's probably some new person high up trying to make their mark on the company. "I'm gonna' save the company money by cracking down on those peons coming back from lunch 5 mins late, etc. Funny how they'll crack down on that but NOT calculate in all the free overtime by employees like myself who will stay late to finish things up.
Bet they made these plans during a 2-hour expense lunch.
That's what I thought, a new manager. But some people are less understanding than others about tardiness. I remember when I first worked in the place where I spent most of my career, I was young, early twenties, and there was this older man who started keeping track of when I arrived at work. I'm not a clock-oriented person, so I was often a couple minutes late or walked in at the last minute. That's just pretty much who I am, and has no relationship whatsoever to my work ethic or the quality of my work. But this guy who had nothing to do with supervising me apparently started bugging my boss about that. My boss liked me, liked my work, thought I was one of his best people, so he just kept telling the guy to not worry about it. But when I heard about it I was half mortified and half angry that this person thought it was any of his business.
I've worked with others like that, and always been glad they weren't the boss. My direct supervisors never had a problem with my tardiness (and even my absenteeism due to various chronic issues). When I was a supervisor, then I had managers wanting me to come down hard on people. But for me it wasn't an issue if the person got their work done. If I had a choice between a super-punctual, well-dressed person who was a crappy worker and a consistently tardy person who worked circles around the others, I'd take the tardy one any day.
You might want to have a private sit-down with your boss and explain the issue and your fears about it. Maybe it has nothing to do with you, maybe your boss thinks it's pretty stupid, maybe they're behind it and don't understand. But at least then you would know. It might put your mind at rest, and stressing over it can't be good for you.