It's extremely doubtful, unless those were the same conditions under which you were working before, without difficulty. The situation you mention is generally one of the few reasons unemployment will allow one to quit as reasonable.
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Generally, unemployment benefits are paid by the state in which you worked. If you live in Connecticut and work in New York you most likely collect unemployment benefits from the state of New York.
Under the Interstate Unemployment Agreement provisions you could file in either, but preferably in New York since it is the "liable state" which collected the unemployment taxes from your employer.
The current rates for New York State unemployment insurance grants about $100 a week for people. These rates will hopefully be less needed in the future.
You file for unemployment from the "liable state" which collects the unemployment insurance from the employer you worked for. In this case, the "liable state" is New York. You can file in Pennsylvania, as the "agent state", but it is New York that Pennsylvania would contact in your behalf.
Erie, New York (Buffalo's county) and all the other county unemployment offices locations for New York state are in the Related Link below
Leonard F. Goldwater has written: 'Federal state extended unemployment compensation, New York State, 1971' -- subject- s -: Insurance, Unemployment, Unemployment Insurance
Answer:You file for unemployment from the "liable state" which collects the unemployment insurance from the employer you worked for. In this case, the "liable state" is New York. If you work 18 months only in New York, but live outside the state, you MUST file with New York. If you worked in 2 or more states, you can file in any of them, or even combine your earnings from several employers. See the Related Link below for more details.
Yes you most certainly can.
It is illegal to collect unemployment benefits while employed in NYS.
New York State - 54,555 square miles.New York City - 468.9 square miles.
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