You collect from the state you work in. The state evaluates all your earnings in the base period and decides which or how many employers would be charged against and the accumulative wages are used to determine the amount of your benefits.
Generally, to collect benefits it is allowed to file for those benefits in any state, but the funds for payment come from the person's last employer and that employer's state employment service (in this case, from Michigan).
Who did you work for last.
Depends, probably!
YES
No. You can only collect from the state that your employer paid his unemployment taxes to, the "liable" state.
Yes, providing you were eligible for unemployment for the base period (the first 4 of the last 5 completed calendar quarters). When you file, the state's investigator will check your work history to determine, collectively, whether you're eligible.
no, if you are collecting disability you are still employed
You certainly need to make a claim against the employer to insure that you get as much of the amount as you can. Consult an attorney for help.
Answer Any employer can find what you made at your last job by calling them to find out.
Of course you can collect.
you can only collect unemployment if you were fired not if you quit. They will call your employer to verify.
Yes you are able to as long as your employer has more then 5 workers. You must talk to your work for them to fill out the paper work. There is a number that employees can call, as i used it last year but I am unable to find it at the moment!