If he was drawing unemployment and is now working, his unemployment benefits will stop when he reports the new job.
If you are receiving unemployment your husband's new job will not affect your benefits.
If you are now collecting unemployment and you want to continue, you should report the new address to the unemployment compensation office in the state you received your benefits from.
Another answer:Some states allow you to collect your own unemployment if you follow your spouse,, due to his transfer, etc. Other do not allow for anything but work related issues. You need to dheck with the state you work in for clarification.You collect unemployment if you were fired or laid off from a job.
Another answer:There are many reasons you can collect unemployment, than the two mentioned above. In some states you can collect if you quit, if for good reason, such as following your spouse who was relocated (or transferred, in the case of military), the job was toxic, harassment, abusive, domestic violence, change in work conditions/terms vs hiring promises, etc. Each state's employment security office sets the standards for what is allowed as reasons.yes
You probably can't collect unemployment if you quit. http://jobsearch.about.com/cs/unemployment/a/unemployment.htm
Yes, as long as you comply with the requirements from the unemployment office.
No. You can only collect from the state that your employer paid his unemployment taxes to, the "liable" state.
No. You QUIT the job. To get unemployment you have to be fired.
Yes, as long as you comply with Florida's regulations concerning the move.
You can as long as you comply with the New Jersey laws relating to unemployment compensation.
Yes.
No, i dont think u can.
First, some states allow you to collect unemployment if you have to move because your spouse relocates, in which case it would be from the state you moved FROM (the "liable state"). Secondly, you could not collect from the state you move to because that state did not collect unemployment taxes from your former employer (hence, not the "liable state")
Probably not.Another answer:Only the "liable state" (the one where your employer pays its unemployment taxes to) is the one you receive your unemployment compensation from.
Yes, as long as you comply with Nevada's requirements on the move.