yes
no
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No. In order to collect unemployment in Texas, you must work in Texas for five calendar quarters.
In general, no. In order to collect unemployment, you must be seeking employment, and accepting it when found. While in prison, that's not going to happen.
As a general rule, people on commission such as Realtors and insurance agents are not eligible in Texas for unemployment. The law was enacted to protect wage earners, spouses, military, etc. and not the self-employed, which most independent contractors in sales are. The Related Link below goes into specifics on this.
Among many reasons Texas will allow you to collect unemployment is if you were fired through no work related faults of your own (i.e. misconduct, thievery, violation of company policy, etc.). See the Related Link below for more details.
Yes. Texas is a community property state, therefore your spouse is entitled to half of the retirement you earned during marriage if you are divorcing in Texas.
Yes, if you qualify for the unemployment and, for Social Security, the only question then is if it is early or for the full benefits
The state of Texas pays your unemployment benefits and, in turn, collects the unemployment taxes from the employers
File for unemployment - the company will denie it - then you have to appeal it- the unemployment office will have a hearing usally over the phone to make a dission. PS have your facts and dates. and this is actually easer than it sounds.
Yes California will pay you unemployment benefits if you quit your job to relocate with a spouse in order to preserve your marriage and keep in tact
No. You can collect under both programs because they are independent of each other.