You can get an estimate of your benefits by checking out the Related Link below.
No. Social Security is exempt from offsets to unemployment in North Carolina.
How long will a pending adjudication take for unemployment benefits in North Carolina
In North Carolina, you can generally only collect unemployment benefits if you are terminated through no fault of your own. If you are fired, most of the time you cannot collect unemployment benefits.
If you were fired for cause then many states do not allow unemployment. The only way to know for sure is to apply.
Yes. Although you must report any earnings you receive while getting unemployment benefits, the Related Link below says you do not have to report the Social Security benefits, meaning it does not affect your unemployment.
north carolina pays it, your employer pays out so much unemployment insurance a year and it comes out of that.
no, because AmeriCorps members are not technically employees, they are volunteers. they receive a stipend, but that is not considered a salary or a wage.
Yes, you can collect them both at the same time.
Strictly speaking, no. If you haven't worked and become eligible for benefits from North Carolina, you can only receive them from California, providing you were eligible back there. What you can do, however, again if you had qualified, is to apply through the North Carolina office to receive them from the "liable state" (CA) through the interstate unemployment program.
One can find information about unemployment in North Carolina from a number of different sources. The North Carolina Employment Security Commission has information, as does their website.
Yes, but you have to file for unemployment in PA.Correction:You cannot be paid by Pennsylvania, as they are not the "liable state" that collected the unemployment taxes from your former employer. Only North Carolina pays, but you can continue to collect from NC. You might contact the PA office to assist you through the interstate unemployment claims program, however.
No. You can't get SSA's disability benefits unless you can prove you can't work, which would make you ineligible for the state's unemployment benefit.