having two h1b visas & getting paid on them
#1
Guest
Posts: n/a
having two h1b visas & getting paid on them
hi gurus,
i have a question
if someone has an existing h1b visa with a company A
and company B has applied for h1b visa transfer;
once the h1b transfer is complete and h1b approval has been received
by
company B, can the person work for company B and get paid by the
company ?
at the same time, can he continue to work for company A and get paid ?
so, in summary, the question is
can a person get paid at the same time from 2 companies having
individual H1Bs with both of them ?
your answers are highly appreciated.
thanks,
gcSeeker.
i have a question
if someone has an existing h1b visa with a company A
and company B has applied for h1b visa transfer;
once the h1b transfer is complete and h1b approval has been received
by
company B, can the person work for company B and get paid by the
company ?
at the same time, can he continue to work for company A and get paid ?
so, in summary, the question is
can a person get paid at the same time from 2 companies having
individual H1Bs with both of them ?
your answers are highly appreciated.
thanks,
gcSeeker.
#2
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: having two h1b visas & getting paid on them
"gcSeeker" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> i have a question
> if someone has an existing h1b visa with a company A
> and company B has applied for h1b visa transfer;
> once the h1b transfer is complete and h1b approval has been received by
> company B, can the person work for company B and get paid by the
> company ?
> at the same time, can he continue to work for company A and get paid ?
> so, in summary, the question is
> can a person get paid at the same time from 2 companies having
> individual H1Bs with both of them ?
Yes. This is known as concurrent H-1B status. The only problem is if you
do not keep the exact same salary and working conditions (for example,
percentage time worked) as in the original H-1B petitions. That is, if you
go from full-time to part-time with company A, company A must file an
amended H-1B petition to authorize your employment.
news:[email protected]...
> i have a question
> if someone has an existing h1b visa with a company A
> and company B has applied for h1b visa transfer;
> once the h1b transfer is complete and h1b approval has been received by
> company B, can the person work for company B and get paid by the
> company ?
> at the same time, can he continue to work for company A and get paid ?
> so, in summary, the question is
> can a person get paid at the same time from 2 companies having
> individual H1Bs with both of them ?
Yes. This is known as concurrent H-1B status. The only problem is if you
do not keep the exact same salary and working conditions (for example,
percentage time worked) as in the original H-1B petitions. That is, if you
go from full-time to part-time with company A, company A must file an
amended H-1B petition to authorize your employment.
#3
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Can I work for both the old and new employer at the same time?
thanks for the response.
i am not talking about concurrent h1-b visas.
i checked INGO's web page and in the H1B faq, i see that he answered
the question "Can I work for both the old and new employer at the same time?".
now the follow up question is,
at the time of applying for H1B transfer, does company B have to
apply in certain specific terms ?.
if i can, can i really work for 80 hours a week and pay taxes for them ?
also, does company B have to apply for H1B transfer in the same metropolitan
area as the original H1B from company A ?
your answers are highly appreciated.
gcSeeker.
"Sylvia Ottemoeller" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> "gcSeeker" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
> > i have a question
> > if someone has an existing h1b visa with a company A
> > and company B has applied for h1b visa transfer;
> >
> > once the h1b transfer is complete and h1b approval has been received by
> > company B, can the person work for company B and get paid by the
> > company ?
> > at the same time, can he continue to work for company A and get paid ?
> >
> > so, in summary, the question is
> > can a person get paid at the same time from 2 companies having
> > individual H1Bs with both of them ?
>
> Yes. This is known as concurrent H-1B status. The only problem is if you
> do not keep the exact same salary and working conditions (for example,
> percentage time worked) as in the original H-1B petitions. That is, if you
> go from full-time to part-time with company A, company A must file an
> amended H-1B petition to authorize your employment.
i am not talking about concurrent h1-b visas.
i checked INGO's web page and in the H1B faq, i see that he answered
the question "Can I work for both the old and new employer at the same time?".
now the follow up question is,
at the time of applying for H1B transfer, does company B have to
apply in certain specific terms ?.
if i can, can i really work for 80 hours a week and pay taxes for them ?
also, does company B have to apply for H1B transfer in the same metropolitan
area as the original H1B from company A ?
your answers are highly appreciated.
gcSeeker.
"Sylvia Ottemoeller" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> "gcSeeker" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
> > i have a question
> > if someone has an existing h1b visa with a company A
> > and company B has applied for h1b visa transfer;
> >
> > once the h1b transfer is complete and h1b approval has been received by
> > company B, can the person work for company B and get paid by the
> > company ?
> > at the same time, can he continue to work for company A and get paid ?
> >
> > so, in summary, the question is
> > can a person get paid at the same time from 2 companies having
> > individual H1Bs with both of them ?
>
> Yes. This is known as concurrent H-1B status. The only problem is if you
> do not keep the exact same salary and working conditions (for example,
> percentage time worked) as in the original H-1B petitions. That is, if you
> go from full-time to part-time with company A, company A must file an
> amended H-1B petition to authorize your employment.
#4
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Can I work for both the old and new employer at the same time?
Actually, you were talking about concurrent H-1B "visas" (actually,
concurrent petitions would be the proper term). You were asking about
somebody getting two H-1Bs and getting paid by two companies. That's
exactly what a concurrent H-1B is (you cannot actually have concurrent
*visas* nor two statii concurrently, but that's not a problem as the visa
and status are both just yours and have nothing to do with the employer.
You merely must have one or more actual H-1B employers).
Company A and company B both would apply for the H-1B separately. These
are really completely independent petitions; they can be in the same city,
in different cities, and even for completely different jobs as long as you
are qualified for both. For instance, you can get an H-1B as a chemical
engineer in Los Angeles and another one as elementary school teacher in
New York, and it would be perfectly legal to work in both jobs at the same
time (although obviously not practical in this contrieved example). And,
yes, it is legal to work full time for both employers if you don't mind
dying of a heart attack first ;-)
Of course, you would need to have teaching credentials and a degree in
chemical engineering to do something like that.
On Wed, 12 Nov 2003 16:29:12 -0800, gcSeeker wrote:
> thanks for the response.
> i am not talking about concurrent h1-b visas.
>
> i checked INGO's web page and in the H1B faq, i see that he answered the
> question "Can I work for both the old and new employer at the same
> time?". now the follow up question is,
> at the time of applying for H1B transfer, does company B have to apply
> in certain specific terms ?.
> if i can, can i really work for 80 hours a week and pay taxes for them ?
>
> also, does company B have to apply for H1B transfer in the same
> metropolitan area as the original H1B from company A ?
>
>
> your answers are highly appreciated.
> gcSeeker.
>
>
>
> "Sylvia Ottemoeller" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:<[email protected]>...
>> "gcSeeker" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>> news:[email protected]...
>>
>> > i have a question
>> > if someone has an existing h1b visa with a company A and company B
>> > has applied for h1b visa transfer;
>> >
>> > once the h1b transfer is complete and h1b approval has been received
>> > by company B, can the person work for company B and get paid by the
>> > company ?
>> > at the same time, can he continue to work for company A and get paid
>> > ?
>> >
>> > so, in summary, the question is
>> > can a person get paid at the same time from 2 companies having
>> > individual H1Bs with both of them ?
>>
>> Yes. This is known as concurrent H-1B status. The only problem is if
>> you do not keep the exact same salary and working conditions (for
>> example, percentage time worked) as in the original H-1B petitions.
>> That is, if you go from full-time to part-time with company A, company
>> A must file an amended H-1B petition to authorize your employment.
--
Remember, I am strictly a layperson without any legal training. I encourage
everybody to seek competent legal counsel rather than relying on usenet
newsgroups.
Please support H.R. 539, H.R. 832 and S. 1510. More information at
http://www.kkeane.com/lobbyspousal-faq.shtml
Please visit my new FAQ at http://www.kkeane.com (always under construction)
My email address in usenet posts is now invalid for spam protection. See
my Web site for information on how to contact me.
Please feel free to enjoy some of my photographs at my Web site
http://www.ingopakleppa.com ! Comments are welcome.
concurrent petitions would be the proper term). You were asking about
somebody getting two H-1Bs and getting paid by two companies. That's
exactly what a concurrent H-1B is (you cannot actually have concurrent
*visas* nor two statii concurrently, but that's not a problem as the visa
and status are both just yours and have nothing to do with the employer.
You merely must have one or more actual H-1B employers).
Company A and company B both would apply for the H-1B separately. These
are really completely independent petitions; they can be in the same city,
in different cities, and even for completely different jobs as long as you
are qualified for both. For instance, you can get an H-1B as a chemical
engineer in Los Angeles and another one as elementary school teacher in
New York, and it would be perfectly legal to work in both jobs at the same
time (although obviously not practical in this contrieved example). And,
yes, it is legal to work full time for both employers if you don't mind
dying of a heart attack first ;-)
Of course, you would need to have teaching credentials and a degree in
chemical engineering to do something like that.
On Wed, 12 Nov 2003 16:29:12 -0800, gcSeeker wrote:
> thanks for the response.
> i am not talking about concurrent h1-b visas.
>
> i checked INGO's web page and in the H1B faq, i see that he answered the
> question "Can I work for both the old and new employer at the same
> time?". now the follow up question is,
> at the time of applying for H1B transfer, does company B have to apply
> in certain specific terms ?.
> if i can, can i really work for 80 hours a week and pay taxes for them ?
>
> also, does company B have to apply for H1B transfer in the same
> metropolitan area as the original H1B from company A ?
>
>
> your answers are highly appreciated.
> gcSeeker.
>
>
>
> "Sylvia Ottemoeller" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:<[email protected]>...
>> "gcSeeker" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>> news:[email protected]...
>>
>> > i have a question
>> > if someone has an existing h1b visa with a company A and company B
>> > has applied for h1b visa transfer;
>> >
>> > once the h1b transfer is complete and h1b approval has been received
>> > by company B, can the person work for company B and get paid by the
>> > company ?
>> > at the same time, can he continue to work for company A and get paid
>> > ?
>> >
>> > so, in summary, the question is
>> > can a person get paid at the same time from 2 companies having
>> > individual H1Bs with both of them ?
>>
>> Yes. This is known as concurrent H-1B status. The only problem is if
>> you do not keep the exact same salary and working conditions (for
>> example, percentage time worked) as in the original H-1B petitions.
>> That is, if you go from full-time to part-time with company A, company
>> A must file an amended H-1B petition to authorize your employment.
--
Remember, I am strictly a layperson without any legal training. I encourage
everybody to seek competent legal counsel rather than relying on usenet
newsgroups.
Please support H.R. 539, H.R. 832 and S. 1510. More information at
http://www.kkeane.com/lobbyspousal-faq.shtml
Please visit my new FAQ at http://www.kkeane.com (always under construction)
My email address in usenet posts is now invalid for spam protection. See
my Web site for information on how to contact me.
Please feel free to enjoy some of my photographs at my Web site
http://www.ingopakleppa.com ! Comments are welcome.
#5
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Can I work for both the old and new employer at the same time?
hi Ingo,
thanks for your quick response.
currently, in my case; company B is transfering my H1B visa
originally issued
with company A. the transfer is complete and company B received the
approval.
so, as your H1B FAQ says, can i work for these two companies at the
same time ?
does working for company B, nullify my H1B with company A ?
the H1B transfer which company B has filed, was it supposed to be
filed in
the same metropolitan area as the one i am currently working (at
company A) ?
the reason, i am asking these questions again, is that they are not
independent petitions. the second one is a transfer from the first one
?
your answers are highly appreciated.
gcSeeker
Ingo Pakleppa - see web site for email <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>. ..
> Actually, you were talking about concurrent H-1B "visas" (actually,
> concurrent petitions would be the proper term). You were asking about
> somebody getting two H-1Bs and getting paid by two companies. That's
> exactly what a concurrent H-1B is (you cannot actually have concurrent
> *visas* nor two statii concurrently, but that's not a problem as the visa
> and status are both just yours and have nothing to do with the employer.
> You merely must have one or more actual H-1B employers).
>
> Company A and company B both would apply for the H-1B separately. These
> are really completely independent petitions; they can be in the same city,
> in different cities, and even for completely different jobs as long as you
> are qualified for both. For instance, you can get an H-1B as a chemical
> engineer in Los Angeles and another one as elementary school teacher in
> New York, and it would be perfectly legal to work in both jobs at the same
> time (although obviously not practical in this contrieved example). And,
> yes, it is legal to work full time for both employers if you don't mind
> dying of a heart attack first ;-)
>
> Of course, you would need to have teaching credentials and a degree in
> chemical engineering to do something like that.
>
> On Wed, 12 Nov 2003 16:29:12 -0800, gcSeeker wrote:
>
> > thanks for the response.
> > i am not talking about concurrent h1-b visas.
> >
> > i checked INGO's web page and in the H1B faq, i see that he answered the
> > question "Can I work for both the old and new employer at the same
> > time?". now the follow up question is,
> > at the time of applying for H1B transfer, does company B have to apply
> > in certain specific terms ?.
> > if i can, can i really work for 80 hours a week and pay taxes for them ?
> >
> > also, does company B have to apply for H1B transfer in the same
> > metropolitan area as the original H1B from company A ?
> >
> >
> > your answers are highly appreciated.
> > gcSeeker.
> >
> >
> >
> > "Sylvia Ottemoeller" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:<[email protected]>...
> >> "gcSeeker" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> >> news:[email protected]...
> >>
> >> > i have a question
> >> > if someone has an existing h1b visa with a company A and company B
> >> > has applied for h1b visa transfer;
> >> >
> >> > once the h1b transfer is complete and h1b approval has been received
> >> > by company B, can the person work for company B and get paid by the
> >> > company ?
> >> > at the same time, can he continue to work for company A and get paid
> >> > ?
> >> >
> >> > so, in summary, the question is
> >> > can a person get paid at the same time from 2 companies having
> >> > individual H1Bs with both of them ?
> >>
> >> Yes. This is known as concurrent H-1B status. The only problem is if
> >> you do not keep the exact same salary and working conditions (for
> >> example, percentage time worked) as in the original H-1B petitions.
> >> That is, if you go from full-time to part-time with company A, company
> >> A must file an amended H-1B petition to authorize your employment.
>
> --
> Remember, I am strictly a layperson without any legal training. I encourage
> everybody to seek competent legal counsel rather than relying on usenet
> newsgroups.
>
> Please support H.R. 539, H.R. 832 and S. 1510. More information at
> http://www.kkeane.com/lobbyspousal-faq.shtml
>
> Please visit my new FAQ at http://www.kkeane.com (always under construction)
>
> My email address in usenet posts is now invalid for spam protection. See
> my Web site for information on how to contact me.
>
> Please feel free to enjoy some of my photographs at my Web site
> http://www.ingopakleppa.com ! Comments are welcome.
thanks for your quick response.
currently, in my case; company B is transfering my H1B visa
originally issued
with company A. the transfer is complete and company B received the
approval.
so, as your H1B FAQ says, can i work for these two companies at the
same time ?
does working for company B, nullify my H1B with company A ?
the H1B transfer which company B has filed, was it supposed to be
filed in
the same metropolitan area as the one i am currently working (at
company A) ?
the reason, i am asking these questions again, is that they are not
independent petitions. the second one is a transfer from the first one
?
your answers are highly appreciated.
gcSeeker
Ingo Pakleppa - see web site for email <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>. ..
> Actually, you were talking about concurrent H-1B "visas" (actually,
> concurrent petitions would be the proper term). You were asking about
> somebody getting two H-1Bs and getting paid by two companies. That's
> exactly what a concurrent H-1B is (you cannot actually have concurrent
> *visas* nor two statii concurrently, but that's not a problem as the visa
> and status are both just yours and have nothing to do with the employer.
> You merely must have one or more actual H-1B employers).
>
> Company A and company B both would apply for the H-1B separately. These
> are really completely independent petitions; they can be in the same city,
> in different cities, and even for completely different jobs as long as you
> are qualified for both. For instance, you can get an H-1B as a chemical
> engineer in Los Angeles and another one as elementary school teacher in
> New York, and it would be perfectly legal to work in both jobs at the same
> time (although obviously not practical in this contrieved example). And,
> yes, it is legal to work full time for both employers if you don't mind
> dying of a heart attack first ;-)
>
> Of course, you would need to have teaching credentials and a degree in
> chemical engineering to do something like that.
>
> On Wed, 12 Nov 2003 16:29:12 -0800, gcSeeker wrote:
>
> > thanks for the response.
> > i am not talking about concurrent h1-b visas.
> >
> > i checked INGO's web page and in the H1B faq, i see that he answered the
> > question "Can I work for both the old and new employer at the same
> > time?". now the follow up question is,
> > at the time of applying for H1B transfer, does company B have to apply
> > in certain specific terms ?.
> > if i can, can i really work for 80 hours a week and pay taxes for them ?
> >
> > also, does company B have to apply for H1B transfer in the same
> > metropolitan area as the original H1B from company A ?
> >
> >
> > your answers are highly appreciated.
> > gcSeeker.
> >
> >
> >
> > "Sylvia Ottemoeller" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:<[email protected]>...
> >> "gcSeeker" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> >> news:[email protected]...
> >>
> >> > i have a question
> >> > if someone has an existing h1b visa with a company A and company B
> >> > has applied for h1b visa transfer;
> >> >
> >> > once the h1b transfer is complete and h1b approval has been received
> >> > by company B, can the person work for company B and get paid by the
> >> > company ?
> >> > at the same time, can he continue to work for company A and get paid
> >> > ?
> >> >
> >> > so, in summary, the question is
> >> > can a person get paid at the same time from 2 companies having
> >> > individual H1Bs with both of them ?
> >>
> >> Yes. This is known as concurrent H-1B status. The only problem is if
> >> you do not keep the exact same salary and working conditions (for
> >> example, percentage time worked) as in the original H-1B petitions.
> >> That is, if you go from full-time to part-time with company A, company
> >> A must file an amended H-1B petition to authorize your employment.
>
> --
> Remember, I am strictly a layperson without any legal training. I encourage
> everybody to seek competent legal counsel rather than relying on usenet
> newsgroups.
>
> Please support H.R. 539, H.R. 832 and S. 1510. More information at
> http://www.kkeane.com/lobbyspousal-faq.shtml
>
> Please visit my new FAQ at http://www.kkeane.com (always under construction)
>
> My email address in usenet posts is now invalid for spam protection. See
> my Web site for information on how to contact me.
>
> Please feel free to enjoy some of my photographs at my Web site
> http://www.ingopakleppa.com ! Comments are welcome.
#6
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Can I work for both the old and new employer at the same time?
"gcSeeker" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> currently, in my case; company B is transfering my H1B visa originally
issued
> with company A. the transfer is complete and company B received the
> approval.
Even though company B's H-1B petition probably asked for a change of
employer, and not concurrent employment, you can act as if the two H-1B
petitions are concurrent.
> so, as your H1B FAQ says, can i work for these two companies at the
> same time ?
> does working for company B, nullify my H1B with company A ?
No, not in itself. Only your noncompliance with the terms of company B's
petition or company A's petition will cause a violation.
> the H1B transfer which company B has filed, was it supposed to be filed in
> the same metropolitan area as the one i am currently working (at
> company A) ?
You must have a proper LCA filed for each location in which you will spend
more than 30 workdays in a one-year period. If USCIS looks at your
situation, for example at the time you ask for permanent resident status,
and notices that you have concurrent full-time H-1B petitions with LCAs for
different cities which are not in commuting distance of one another, I think
there will be a problem.
> the reason, i am asking these questions again, is that they are not
> independent petitions. the second one is a transfer from the first one?
They can act as concurrent petitions, as long as you follow the terms and
conditions, including the hours worked and the salary, exactly.
If there is any chance that you cannot follow these terms and conditions
exactly, the relevant company must file an amended petition to reflect the
terms and conditions under which you are actually employed with that
company.
> Ingo Pakleppa - see web site for email <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:<[email protected]>. ..
> > Actually, you were talking about concurrent H-1B "visas" (actually,
> > concurrent petitions would be the proper term). You were asking about
> > somebody getting two H-1Bs and getting paid by two companies. That's
> > exactly what a concurrent H-1B is (you cannot actually have concurrent
> > *visas* nor two statii concurrently, but that's not a problem as the
visa
> > and status are both just yours and have nothing to do with the employer.
> > You merely must have one or more actual H-1B employers).
> >
> > Company A and company B both would apply for the H-1B separately. These
> > are really completely independent petitions; they can be in the same
city,
> > in different cities, and even for completely different jobs as long as
you
> > are qualified for both. For instance, you can get an H-1B as a chemical
> > engineer in Los Angeles and another one as elementary school teacher in
> > New York, and it would be perfectly legal to work in both jobs at the
same
> > time (although obviously not practical in this contrieved example). And,
> > yes, it is legal to work full time for both employers if you don't mind
> > dying of a heart attack first ;-)
> >
> > Of course, you would need to have teaching credentials and a degree in
> > chemical engineering to do something like that.
> >
> > On Wed, 12 Nov 2003 16:29:12 -0800, gcSeeker wrote:
> >
> > > thanks for the response.
> > > i am not talking about concurrent h1-b visas.
> > >
> > > i checked INGO's web page and in the H1B faq, i see that he answered
the
> > > question "Can I work for both the old and new employer at the same
> > > time?". now the follow up question is,
> > > at the time of applying for H1B transfer, does company B have to apply
> > > in certain specific terms ?.
> > > if i can, can i really work for 80 hours a week and pay taxes for
them?
> > >
> > > also, does company B have to apply for H1B transfer in the same
> > > metropolitan area as the original H1B from company A ?
> > > "Sylvia Ottemoeller" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > > news:<[email protected]>...
> > >> "gcSeeker" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > >> news:[email protected]...
> > >>
> > >> > i have a question
> > >> > if someone has an existing h1b visa with a company A and company B
> > >> > has applied for h1b visa transfer;
> > >> >
> > >> > once the h1b transfer is complete and h1b approval has been
received
> > >> > by company B, can the person work for company B and get paid by the
> > >> > company ?
> > >> > at the same time, can he continue to work for company A and get
paid ?
> > >> >
> > >> > so, in summary, the question is
> > >> > can a person get paid at the same time from 2 companies having
> > >> > individual H1Bs with both of them ?
> > >> Yes. This is known as concurrent H-1B status. The only problem is
if
> > >> you do not keep the exact same salary and working conditions (for
> > >> example, percentage time worked) as in the original H-1B petitions.
> > >> That is, if you go from full-time to part-time with company A,
company
> > >> A must file an amended H-1B petition to authorize your employment.
news:[email protected]...
> currently, in my case; company B is transfering my H1B visa originally
issued
> with company A. the transfer is complete and company B received the
> approval.
Even though company B's H-1B petition probably asked for a change of
employer, and not concurrent employment, you can act as if the two H-1B
petitions are concurrent.
> so, as your H1B FAQ says, can i work for these two companies at the
> same time ?
> does working for company B, nullify my H1B with company A ?
No, not in itself. Only your noncompliance with the terms of company B's
petition or company A's petition will cause a violation.
> the H1B transfer which company B has filed, was it supposed to be filed in
> the same metropolitan area as the one i am currently working (at
> company A) ?
You must have a proper LCA filed for each location in which you will spend
more than 30 workdays in a one-year period. If USCIS looks at your
situation, for example at the time you ask for permanent resident status,
and notices that you have concurrent full-time H-1B petitions with LCAs for
different cities which are not in commuting distance of one another, I think
there will be a problem.
> the reason, i am asking these questions again, is that they are not
> independent petitions. the second one is a transfer from the first one?
They can act as concurrent petitions, as long as you follow the terms and
conditions, including the hours worked and the salary, exactly.
If there is any chance that you cannot follow these terms and conditions
exactly, the relevant company must file an amended petition to reflect the
terms and conditions under which you are actually employed with that
company.
> Ingo Pakleppa - see web site for email <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:<[email protected]>. ..
> > Actually, you were talking about concurrent H-1B "visas" (actually,
> > concurrent petitions would be the proper term). You were asking about
> > somebody getting two H-1Bs and getting paid by two companies. That's
> > exactly what a concurrent H-1B is (you cannot actually have concurrent
> > *visas* nor two statii concurrently, but that's not a problem as the
visa
> > and status are both just yours and have nothing to do with the employer.
> > You merely must have one or more actual H-1B employers).
> >
> > Company A and company B both would apply for the H-1B separately. These
> > are really completely independent petitions; they can be in the same
city,
> > in different cities, and even for completely different jobs as long as
you
> > are qualified for both. For instance, you can get an H-1B as a chemical
> > engineer in Los Angeles and another one as elementary school teacher in
> > New York, and it would be perfectly legal to work in both jobs at the
same
> > time (although obviously not practical in this contrieved example). And,
> > yes, it is legal to work full time for both employers if you don't mind
> > dying of a heart attack first ;-)
> >
> > Of course, you would need to have teaching credentials and a degree in
> > chemical engineering to do something like that.
> >
> > On Wed, 12 Nov 2003 16:29:12 -0800, gcSeeker wrote:
> >
> > > thanks for the response.
> > > i am not talking about concurrent h1-b visas.
> > >
> > > i checked INGO's web page and in the H1B faq, i see that he answered
the
> > > question "Can I work for both the old and new employer at the same
> > > time?". now the follow up question is,
> > > at the time of applying for H1B transfer, does company B have to apply
> > > in certain specific terms ?.
> > > if i can, can i really work for 80 hours a week and pay taxes for
them?
> > >
> > > also, does company B have to apply for H1B transfer in the same
> > > metropolitan area as the original H1B from company A ?
> > > "Sylvia Ottemoeller" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > > news:<[email protected]>...
> > >> "gcSeeker" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > >> news:[email protected]...
> > >>
> > >> > i have a question
> > >> > if someone has an existing h1b visa with a company A and company B
> > >> > has applied for h1b visa transfer;
> > >> >
> > >> > once the h1b transfer is complete and h1b approval has been
received
> > >> > by company B, can the person work for company B and get paid by the
> > >> > company ?
> > >> > at the same time, can he continue to work for company A and get
paid ?
> > >> >
> > >> > so, in summary, the question is
> > >> > can a person get paid at the same time from 2 companies having
> > >> > individual H1Bs with both of them ?
> > >> Yes. This is known as concurrent H-1B status. The only problem is
if
> > >> you do not keep the exact same salary and working conditions (for
> > >> example, percentage time worked) as in the original H-1B petitions.
> > >> That is, if you go from full-time to part-time with company A,
company
> > >> A must file an amended H-1B petition to authorize your employment.