Not at this time. They are apparently researching various options and the earliest I was able to find out would be "by 2010".
Sovereign bank
According to the "Certifying Weeks" item 9. in the Related Links below, Florida pays benefits by either paper check or direct bank deposit.
A check is valid for 6 months from the date of issue. If it is deposited within 6 months from the date of issue the bank has the obligation to cash it (As long as the check issuer maintains sufficient balance in his account)
Only the bank can certify a check, or someone at the bank. Usually, the bank will not certify a personal check, they will issue what is called a "certified check". A certified check is guaranteed to have available funds by the bank that certifies it. Certified means the funds are held aside. Anyone with a certified check made out to them can go to that bank and collect cash. In days of banking past, you could have a personal or business check certified by the bank, and they would stamp the check "certified" and hold the funds aside on that item. Now, the bank will just issue a certified check after taking the money from your account and the certified check will be drawn on the bank's account. This answer is for the U.S. banking system.
Wherever you receive your mail, unless it's automatically deposited in your bank account or a debit card.
It Depends: Yes - If the check has just reached the bank and the banks is still processing the payment. If so, you can issue a stop payment and the bank will not pay for the check No - If the bank has already processed the check and released the payment to the payee customers bank account.
No, because banks charge a fee to issue bank drafts, but if you have a checking account, and don't care about fancy options, your bank will probably issue you a book of checks for free.
A bank issues a cashiers check,on behalf of a depositor, by setting funds aside from the depositor's account.
Yes, just call the bank of issue, tell the to verify funds for the amount of the check. I do this all the time.
A routing number is a numerical identification of the bank that issue the check. It will tell you what bank, city and state right down to the branch.
Unemployment checks are generally sent by mail to the receipient, who is then responsible for depositing them in the bank. They're just checks, so you'd deposit them the same way you would any other check (though you may be asked to provide proof of ID).
Someone deposit state refund check thru mobile bank. I told them user name and pass. How can I check it is real? What if the check is fake what is gonna happen?