Yes, you can collect unemployment insurance if you have worked in Hawaii but moved to California. Even if you think you do not have enough in Hawaii's unemployment insurance to collect. I worked in California all my life and was offered a job in Hawaii in October 2008. I worked until March 2009 and then tried to collect while i lived in Hawaii. I was denied befits in Hawaii in March 2009, so I moved back to California and could not find work so i collected unemployment in California. It was a knowledgeable person in California EDD that recommended that i file in Hawaii versus California because of the amount i would collect there was a lot more than i collected here. I told them I was denied benefits over there because i did not work long enough over there (hence; i did not put enough money in Hawaii's Kitty) So California's EDD said they would transfer what I put in California's unemployment insurance to Hawaii's unemployment insurance, then that would make me eligible to collect.
Not if the reason for unemployment is merely the temporary move. If you had already qualified for the benefits before moving then yes, as long as you complied with California's requirements.
Yes, as long as you had initially qualified and followed California's requirements to collect from out of state.
Yes
If you have only been threatened with terminated, you cannot collect unemployment. If you have been fired, you can apply for unemployment benefits and they will determine if you are eligible for benefits.
No. To be eligible for unemployment benefits, you must be available for work. If you are incarcerated, you are not available for work.
Yes.
No. Illinois considers an employer "chargeable" after 30 days of employment.
You will file in Illinois. Here is the Related Link below.
No, one week without work is not unemployment. It's a vacation.
Yep.
People who work on commission only basis are not eligible.
yes you can
Looks like right now you can get 26 weeks of unemployment assuming you have enough benefits to collect the full 26 weeks. And if you are eligible you can qualify for an additional 33 weeks of emergency unemployment benefits.
Yes, it does. Illinois unemployment law allows the state to reduce your unemployment compensation by 50% of your Social Security benefit. Illinois is one of only five states that still apply an offset to unemployment. For more information, see Related Questions, below.