April 23, 2026 at 12:35 pm

Supervisor Tells Maintenance Technician Not To Turn Off Any Machinery Without His Permission, So The Supervisor Ends Up Getting Fired

by Jayne Elliott

man in white hard hat looking at assembly line machinery in a factory

Shutterstock/Reddit

Imagine working as a maintenance technician on an assembly line. If you noticed that a machine wasn’t functioning properly, would you turn off the machine so you could repair it, or would you contact your supervisor first?

In this story, one man was in this situation, and he used to simply repair machinery as needed, but then his supervisor made a new rule, a rule that backfired in spectacular fashion.

Let’s read all about it.

The nightshift supervisor has a date with Malicious Compliance

Many years ago I worked as a maintenance technician on an automated assembly line. It was my job to perform quality audits throughout the section of the line where I worked.

If something didn’t pass inspection then I would put the product on hold and test additional samples. Whenever this further tests failed, I would stop production, notify the lead or supervisor and then troubleshoot and repair the machine in question.

For a few years I worked the nightshift.

The supervisor was often hard to reach.

The nightshift supervisor, who I will call TD Grey, had a habit of vanishing for most of the night. He would be around at the start of the shift, (We worked twelve hour shifts) and then he would show up after the morning meeting at maybe doddle about the office until the end of the shift.

As I was doing my audits one night, I found a machine that was drifting out of spec. I shut it down and paged Mr Grey but he didn’t respond.

I found the issue causing the quality failure and got the parts required for the repair. The repair took about an hour followed by testing of 100% of the product for a few minutes.

His repair work was not appreciated.

Meanwhile TD Grey returned from the morning meeting. He was angry and walked straight up to me and asked who authorized me to shut down his machine.

I tried to explain that it had failed an audit and that I was just following procedure.

TD wasn’t interested in anything I had to say.

His lack of awareness about what was going on made him look bad.

Apparently during the morning meeting he reported that our area was running with no issues.

An engineer who would walk our area each morning contradicted him and said that the technician had one of the machines down for an hour and was just now releasing it to production.

TD gave me a written warning and told me that I do not have the authority to stop production without his approval.

Next time, he made sure not to repair anything without talking to TD first.

A month or so later, a similar situation arose and I tried paging Mr Grey who didn’t respond.

I should mention that this was well before cell phones and no we didn’t carry pagers. To page someone you had to call the reception desk and they would page them over the PA System. Since there wasn’t a receptionist at night, this function was handled by a security guard.

I told security to page Mr Grey every five minutes until he responded.

They wanted to do it every thirty minutes but I insisted on nothing less than every ten minutes and I also wanted them to log each page. This was normal procedure but they often would just record one entry in the log regardless of how many times they repeat the page.

Eventually, the engineer wondered what was going on.

When the engineer came in he looked at my audit sheet and asked me why I hadn’t stopped production.

I explained that I had been told I couldn’t without Mr Grey’s approval. I also told him that security had been paging him every ten minutes since I found the issue.

The engineer stopped production and told me to begin repairs. He then got a copy of the log from security and went to the morning meeting.

When TD Grey reported that all machines were running with no issues, the engineer spoke up and asked why security had been paging him every ten minutes for over three hours.

I never did find out where Mr Grey went every night or what he did but he soon had more time to do whatever it was.

Mr Grey got himself fired by insisting on being notified before any machines could be turned off and repaired. I wonder where he really was all night.

Let’s see how Reddit responded to this story.

Here’s a guess at what the supervisor was doing all night.

2026 03 15 at 1.57.04 PM Supervisor Tells Maintenance Technician Not To Turn Off Any Machinery Without His Permission, So The Supervisor Ends Up Getting Fired

I’m sure the supervisor didn’t appreciate it!

2026 03 15 at 1.57.16 PM Supervisor Tells Maintenance Technician Not To Turn Off Any Machinery Without His Permission, So The Supervisor Ends Up Getting Fired

He brought it on himself!

2026 03 15 at 1.57.29 PM Supervisor Tells Maintenance Technician Not To Turn Off Any Machinery Without His Permission, So The Supervisor Ends Up Getting Fired

Another worker was in a similar situation but knew where the electrician went.

2026 03 15 at 1.57.58 PM Supervisor Tells Maintenance Technician Not To Turn Off Any Machinery Without His Permission, So The Supervisor Ends Up Getting Fired

Lying in a meeting won’t end well.

If you liked that post, check out this one about an employee that got revenge on HR when they refused to reimburse his travel.