You can draw both unemployment and disability in Washington State. There is a limit to the amount of unemployment you can draw without it affecting your disability payments. Each situation is unique.
Yes. Unemployment depends solely on having worked in the past, and now being out of work and actively looking.
A worker can receive Social Security benefits, when qualified, for being the spouse of a deceased worker, for being partially disabled, for being age 62 or older.
No. As a Prisoner of the State of Washington you are not eligible for unemployment benefits.
no you can not. your 401k once withdrawn is now considered income.
This depends on the severity of the disability, and the state laws regarding unemployment and disability issues. The SSDI might be interested in what you were doing, so its best to check with both the Federal and state offices to get clarification.
no, because it is considerd ilegal
No you can't collect from both disability and unemployment at the same time. Disability provides income replacement if you are physically unable to work. Unemployment replaces income for those able to work, but out of work due to job loss.
Collecting unemployment while on disability depends on the state and the laws. However, in most states, you cannot collect both.
In order to collect unemployment benefits, you must be physically able to work. In order to get disability benefits, you must NOT be able to work. So you can't have it both ways.
The criteria you set out would seem to qualify you. However, each state sets its own criteria for eligibility and, in most cases, you could not receive both short term disability and unemployment simultaneously.
YOu cannot receive unemployment benefits at all unless you are available for work and actively seeking work. So, if you are DISABLED, you are not fit for work, and are disqualified from UI benefits.
This depends on the state's criteria for both, history (and thus qualifications) of the work period, length of time of the disability payments, and time left in the benefit year to collect unemployment.
In MA I asked that same question. "Now that I'm getting disability, I guess I have to stop unemployment." Answer: "No, they are completely independent." So I collected in both. Of course, you will pay taxes on both, so put some aside. It seems counter-intuitive, since disability means you can't work and in unemploment you state you can work. I think the reasoning is: If you read your disability rules closely, they acknowledge the possibility that you find some work that you can do, and since that takes job-finding time you still qualify for unemployment.
Unemployment insurance replaces your income if you lose your job.Short term disability insurance protects your income if you become disabled, and are physically unable to work.The two are mutually exclusive, unless your employer lays you off during your disability.
Yes, as long as you qualify for each of them individually.
George Vancouver and David Thompson both explored Washington state. Washington was granted statehood in 1889 as the 42nd state.