No, Catholic Schools are not covered by unemployment laws.
Yes, an employ of a catholic school can collect unemployment if they are laid off or wrongfully terminated. This school would have been required to pay into the unemployment system.
Technically you can not collect unemployment if your school schedule interfers with any job opportunity.
No. No.
Usually, teachers are paid a salary and cannot collect unemployment between school terms, but you can check with your unemployment office. If you are paid hourly, it might be possible to collect benefits. Again, check with your unemployment office or ask the school administrators if it is possible to collect unemployment. The school can probably tell you. Another answer: I doubt it, but call or email your unemployment department. I am a retired teacher who subs during the school year and tried to collect unemployment in the summer. They paid me, but then decided that I didn't earn it so I had to pay it back. There is a law that has been passed that prohibits teachers from unemployment, but I am not sure if this a federal law or state.
Yes.
NO... if you are not looking for work you cannot collect
um no sory
If your a whale.
The difficulty school personnel have with trying to collect unemployment is that most states do not allow unemployment when you are under contract or have assurance that you will return to work when school resumes and therefore "are not unemployed" in the regular sense of the word.
You would need to check with your local unemployment office.
yes. nannies can actually collect unemployment
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.