No, one week without work is not unemployment. It's a vacation.
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.
People who work on commission only basis are not eligible.
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.
No. No. No. Unemployment is only for salaried (waged) people.
Probably not. Unemployment benefits are usually only available if you lose your job (i.e. fired, laid off), not if you forfeit it.
No matter which state you live in or whether you work full or part time, you are not eligible for unemployment if you quit your job. Only if you lost the job through no fault of your own (fired without cause, laid off, hazardous working conditions, etc.) can you collect unemployment benefits.
Sorry, but you can only collect unemployment benefits if you was hired by a company full time and the company laid you off for no reason. Temps are people who only works at temp agencies or recruiters. They never worked at a company and was never on their payroll so how can they collect. Temps are on-call and only will call the worker if they have work which is occasionally so not qualified.
No students are not employed. You can only collect unemployment if you actually worked enough weeks at a job to have paid unemployment compensation.
No. You can only collect from the state that your employer paid his unemployment taxes to, the "liable" state.
You can only collect unemployment benefits from the "liable state", where the employer paid unemployment taxes, so Missouri would not pay you benefits, as you described it.
You can collect both Social Security and unemployment security benefits in all 50 states at the same time. Only 4 states (Illinois, Louisiana, Utah, and Virginia) offset unemployment by some part of the Social Security benefit.
no