Maestro Posted January 27, 2009 Share Posted January 27, 2009 A teacher posted two work-permit-related questions here in the visa forum, where his post correctly belongs, but I have a feeling that frequenters of this forum would be better able to answer them. Rather than have him duplicate the topic in this forum, I would be grateful if you clicked on the link above to see if you have the answers to his questions. (With my limited knowledge on the subject I would guess that it is no to both questions) Thank you. -- Maestro Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PeaceBlondie Posted January 28, 2009 Share Posted January 28, 2009 Thanks, Maestro. Better to have one main discussion over there. I already said "I told you so..." in a similar thread in the visa forum http://www.thaivisa.com/forum/Switching-Sc...sa-t238329.html Without visa and work permit problems, this is still a very difficult culture and country for teaching. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
allane Posted January 30, 2009 Share Posted January 30, 2009 Some general advice to anyone who is leaving one job where he has a Work Permit, and taking a new job where he wants to obtain one: 1. Do not quit your old job any earlier than you have to. When you quit a job, you only have 7 days to either leave the county, or find a new job AND have your new employer complete and submit all the necessary paperwork. 2. If you are on good terms with your old employer, ask him if will keep your old Work Permit active (i.e. not return it to the Labour Dept.), until your new employer is up to speed, and is well within one week of having everything ready to submit. You may want to ask your new employer to enter your "start date" as a date later then when you actually started working. Having an overlap did not cause me a problem because I was dealing with two different labour offices, but things might be different if both of your employers are dealing with the same office. 3. If possible accompany the repesentatives of both schools to all the necessary offices. If there is a missing signature, or any other small problem, you can attend to it on the spot, saving precious time, if you are trying to get things done within 7 days. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TerryLH Posted January 31, 2009 Share Posted January 31, 2009 If you are on an extension of a visa, I think you no longer have 7 days to leave unless you get a seven days extension for 1900 baht at an immigration office. If you are still on an original visa, you can stay until the permitted to stay date in your passport. If a multi entry visa, you can cross a border and get another 90 days, as long as you're still with the use by date. That is my understanding, but is, of course, subject to being wrong. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mario2008 Posted January 31, 2009 Share Posted January 31, 2009 TerryLH, you gave the correct answer. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
phaethon Posted January 31, 2009 Share Posted January 31, 2009 I think teachers should be kept in the teaching forum unless they can prove they are up-to-date with their shots... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
allane Posted February 1, 2009 Share Posted February 1, 2009 And how do we know that you are up to date with yours ? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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