If that's the total work performed in the last 15 months, then no you could not. Otherwise, you can normally accumulate the total work experience over the last 15 months and apply.
Yes you could draw unemployment this happened to one of my family members.
Unless you had previous work history from which to draw unemployment against, you would not be eligible on one weeks employment only.
It would be for the state you worked in, you can not draw unemployment from a state other than the one you worked in.
It depends on the circumstances and the laws in your state covering same.
What the max you can draw
You can apply and if you worked at any other job in the last year that did pay fica you can draw on that income.
Yes. You can receive unemployment benefits from whatever 'liable state' you worked in. You can apply directly to that state or through the one you live in, known as Interstate claim, who will then transfer your claim to the right state.
you can not draw unemployment in Texas if you are working full time
You wish!! If you are on unemployment in Georgia, but now live in Tennessee, you would apply for unemployment in Tennessee. Your records would transfer and you would be paid in the state where you live.Another answer:You can only draw unemployment from the "liable state", Georgia in your case, because that is the state that your employer paid the unemployment taxes, through the payroll taxes, to. You might file with Tennessee, but they would only be helping you receive the benefits from Georgia.
If you work in SC then you don't need to draw unemployment. You, umm, work.
You can draw both unemployment and Social Security in all 50 states.
You can draw unemployment and Social Security at the same time in all states (4 states will offset your unemployment by a portion of your SS benefits). All states have separate requirements, though, when it comes to pensions, 401k's, IRA's, etc. so you need to contact your own state regarding those non-SS type of retirement programs.