Yeah, but this is "top of the queue" priority, not "must get done today" priority. The managers were talking about lead times and the potential of laying someone off, not "if this doesn't get fixed today, someone is going home hungry!". There's no mention anywhere in the story of someone actually at risk of being let go due to the delay.
I've also worked support at a startup that was all about the whole "we don't really need tests for trivial changes!" factor. Oh, what fun it was when the devs would push straight to production at 1am, with an "ah, it'll get tested in the morning sometime, maybe"... in the meantime our farmer clients were using the tool well before office hours to plan their days around irrigation requirements. Those changes that devs thought so trivial were usually trivial, but sometimes were quite catastrophic due to unintended interactions.
I've also worked support at a startup that was all about the whole "we don't really need tests for trivial changes!" factor. Oh, what fun it was when the devs would push straight to production at 1am, with an "ah, it'll get tested in the morning sometime, maybe"... in the meantime our farmer clients were using the tool well before office hours to plan their days around irrigation requirements. Those changes that devs thought so trivial were usually trivial, but sometimes were quite catastrophic due to unintended interactions.