This would probably depend on 2 things. First, was he self-employed (contractors usually are and therefore not eligible), and second, was there unemployment taxes paid by the company to the state of Texas (if not, Texas is not liable).
you can not draw unemployment in Texas if you are working full time
yes. Depending on how old you are.
Yes.
No, a Catholic School teacher can not draw unemployment in Texas unless the bishop of the particular diocese chooses to have the diocese participate in the program. Churches (and church schools), as a rule, are exempt from paying unemployment taxes unless they choose to do so.
No, a Catholic School teacher can not draw unemployment in Texas unless the bishop of the particular diocese chooses to have the diocese participate in the program. Churches (and church schools), as a rule, are exempt from paying unemployment taxes unless they choose to do so.
Yes. If you have good cause, as described in the Related Link below, you can be eligible for unemployment benefits in the state of Texas.
What the max you can draw
According to the Texas formula, the max one can receive is 415 per week. It is up in the air about how many weeks one can draw. The original amount was for 26 weeks but congress has passed legislation which can increase it to 52 weeks and beyond.
You can draw both unemployment and Social Security in all 50 states.
If you work in SC then you don't need to draw unemployment. You, umm, work.
If you are jobless, earn no income, and actively seek work you can qualify. Gains or losses on house sales are not earnings.
In Kansas, you can not draw unemployment if your hours are cut from 40 hours to 32 hours. Unemployment can be drawn if your fired, not just for a cut in hours.