You can't qualify for the mere act of moving to another state. There has to be other eligibility issues such as the work history, reason for the loss of the job, etc.
You can not collect unemployment if you are retired or working.
Receiving unemployment benefits is not determined by what you want to be, but by your work history, reason for leaving your employer, etc.
You might want to call a lawyer or whoever is giving you the unemployment benefits. My best guess is no because you are leaving the state so you must apply for unemployment benefits for the state you relocate in. Keep on striving!
No, you cannot qualify for unemployment for VOLUNTARILY leaving a full-time job.
Frederick Douglass escaped from Massachusetts after leaving Maryland.
If your part time work history qualifies you regarding time, wages earned, reason for leaving, etc. then yes. Only 4 states offsets your unemployment be some amount of your Social Security, otherwise the 2 benefits are independent of each other.
Narnia.
It depends on whether leaving the job was through no fault of your own.
If you quit the first job through no fault of the employer, but for your own convenience, that job would not offer you unemployment. On the other hand, if you qualified on the new job, as to time on the job, earnings, reason for leaving, etc. then it would be a whole new ball game. So forget the first one and concentrate on qualifying on the last one.
Well, I don't know what your choices were but I can tell you the ones that were established by dissenters leaving the Massachusetts Bay Colony: Rhode Island and Connecticut. Roger Williams founded Rhode Island Colony in 1636 due to his dissent from Puritan beliefs. Another dissenter, Anne Hutchinson, followed him there several years later. Minister Thomas Hooker led one hundred others in leaving the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1636. They settled in the Connecticut River Valley at the site of an Old Dutch fort, calling it Hartford. Three years, Hartford and two other settlements were joined to form the colony of Connecticut.
A claims examiner will check out the reasons for leaving the new job to determine if you can collect under the old one. See the Related Link below for details.
Depending on your state's rulings, it is possible if the reason for leaving this job is acceptable to the state and if you still had benefit time left on your previous unemployment benefits.