To qualify for benefits, you must have been paid wages for insured work, for civilian employment with the federal government, or for active duty in the military service in two or more quarters of your base period.
The regular base period is the first four of the last five completed calendar quarters before the effective date of your new claim for unemployment insurance benefits.
Each quarter equals 3 months. so two or more quarters would be a minimum of 6 months.
Yes, as long as you comply with the requirements from the unemployment office.
No. The five states that offset unemployment benefits by your Social Security are: Illinois, Louisiana, South Dakota, Utah and Virginia. South Dakota and Virginia formally repealed their offset laws, but have a provision allowing them to reduce unemployment compensation by 50% of your Social Security benefit when the state unemployment funds drop below a pre-determined threshold. The long recession and high unemployment rate have triggered temporary (but indefinite) offsets in these states.
You probably can't collect unemployment if you quit. http://jobsearch.about.com/cs/unemployment/a/unemployment.htm
You can as long as you comply with the New Jersey laws relating to unemployment compensation.
No, because there is no tax deductions in your disability which entitles you to receive unemployment.
49 days
Yes, as long as you qualify for each of them individually.
Yes, as long as you comply with Nevada's requirements on the move.
A flight from LAX to South Dakota takes about 3 hours. The distance between LAX and South Dakota is 1,238 miles or 1,993 kilometers.
5 hours and 39 minutes.
Yes you can collect both, as long as you qualify for each.
Yes, as long as you comply with Florida's regulations concerning the move.