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You have to be able, willing, and looking for work, to receive unemployment compensation benefits.
No, not in most schools.
Veterans are (and were) allowed to file claims with the VA (Veterans Administration) immediately upon receiving their honorable discharge.
Yes, you will still be able to receive unemployment. I am not sure if the amount of severence has anything to do with it though. I received a severence and still qualified for max unemployment benefits.
I believe you can............ No you Can't at least this is from experience in PA
No. They are considered an excluded class because they were not employees of a private company
No, Social Security benefits will not reduce unemployment compensation. They are 2 different programs and do not affect each other.
No. If you qualify under each program's guidelines, you will receive a full check for both Social Security and unemployment. Michigan no longer offsets unemployment compensation when you receive Social Security income.
Yes, taxes come out of everything!
Example sentence - He did not qualify for unemployment compensation because he has never been employed.
Ohio is one of the states in which unemployment compensation is fully taxed. In Ohio, unemployment compensation is treated the same as a type of income, therefore income taxes are paid.
Unemployment compensation is income tax reportable.