If you have a contract for the next year you can't collect unemployment. You have a job. You can retire after a certain number of years in the system and at a certain age.
I'm pretty positive he/she cannot. I live in Trenton, NJ, and my once-aspiring unemployment hopes during the summer break are quickly vanishing.
This state has so many different rules that you will need to go to the state employment office and ask them.
you can get unemployment benefits 26 weeks per claim. 1 claim per year.
It depends on what school they work for (private or public) and how they choose to receive their pay, paid over a 10 month period or pro-rated and paid all year long. In the second instance, they cannot claim unemployment.
If you had enough weeks paid in and your average income makes you eligible and if the school system you worked for does not dispute your claim. I am a substitute teacher and have gotten unemployment for the past two summers, but I also worked another non-school job, but I did not have enough income from my non-school job to draw unemployment alone...so the combined amounts made it possible. It's always best to apply and see what happens.
No, if you substitute teach in Michigan, you are a seasonal employee with a "reasonable chance" of returning to substitute teach with school breaks and summer breaks in between work time. You can, however, be eligible for unemployment benefits if you are laid-off from a full-time teaching position.
At Summer Slam on August 17, 2008, Shawn Michaels made his first appearance since The Great American Bash and stated that he will not retire.
Earth, Pluto, and China
yes.
Usually, teachers are paid a salary and cannot collect unemployment between school terms, but you can check with your unemployment office. If you are paid hourly, it might be possible to collect benefits. Again, check with your unemployment office or ask the school administrators if it is possible to collect unemployment. The school can probably tell you. Another answer: I doubt it, but call or email your unemployment department. I am a retired teacher who subs during the school year and tried to collect unemployment in the summer. They paid me, but then decided that I didn't earn it so I had to pay it back. There is a law that has been passed that prohibits teachers from unemployment, but I am not sure if this a federal law or state.
Because a teacher is technically not unemployed, because their contract says they return to work when school resumes, they would not be eligible. This is how most, if not all states operate regarding teachers, unfortunately.
In the fall of 2000 after the Summer Olympics in Sydney.