Your collecting unemployment before has no bearing on your ability to do so now. All that matters is if you qualify under the current conditions and with your latest employer(s)
NO. A persn who is incarcerated cannot collect unemployment.
The person who is eligible to collect life insurance is the beneficiary. Anybody can be named the beneficiary. There are steps that need to be taken before a person can collect.
No. If you are really retiring, it would mean you are not looking for full time employment, which is a key part of one's being eligible for unemployment benefits. Merely not being qualified for any other program does not entitle you to the benefits, unfortunately.
Yes, you can collect unemployment insurance if you have worked in Hawaii but moved to California. Even if you think you do not have enough in Hawaii's unemployment insurance to collect. I worked in California all my life and was offered a job in Hawaii in October 2008. I worked until March 2009 and then tried to collect while i lived in Hawaii. I was denied befits in Hawaii in March 2009, so I moved back to California and could not find work so i collected unemployment in California. It was a knowledgeable person in California EDD that recommended that i file in Hawaii versus California because of the amount i would collect there was a lot more than i collected here. I told them I was denied benefits over there because i did not work long enough over there (hence; i did not put enough money in Hawaii's Kitty) So California's EDD said they would transfer what I put in California's unemployment insurance to Hawaii's unemployment insurance, then that would make me eligible to collect.
Don't think so as a worker must be able to work to collect unemployment benifits.
"Has collected" is the present perfect tense of "collect" used for third person singular subjects.
The fact that you received severance pay, in itself, does not make you eligible for unemployment benefits. There are many reasons a person receives severance, including voluntarily leaving a job, so that is not a determinant.
Most likely not because it would be the person's fault and not the companies.
no. If your on workers comp. then your still employeed.
You are not entitled for unemployment for working a single day. You have to have a required period of work and wages to be eligible
A 99er refers to a person who has been unemployed for 99 weeks, at which point they are no longer eligible for unemployment insurance.
No. You can only collect from the "liable state" which the employer pays unemployment taxes to, which in your case is California.