Although states laws vary, typically you are ineligible for unemployment benefits if you voluntarily quit due to personal reasons not attributable to the work.
of course
You can draw from the various retirement plans and unemployment, but if you mean you're going to retire, that would violate the conditions of having to constantly seek full time employment and would make you ineligible.
If you qualify under all the required reasons, yes. It is not age dependent.
What the max you can draw
It depends on what your state's unemployment laws are regarding reasons for termination. If your work was very serious in that sleep would be very harmful/dangerous (i.e. asleep at the controls of a train), then the employer would be justified.
you can not draw unemployment in Texas if you are working full time
If a person was wrongfully terminated from their job for health reasons, they may be able to sue or draw unemployment. The person will need to speak with and possibly hire an attorney.
Because the person mint have a disease's.
You can't draw unemployment if you are permanently retiring. To qualify for those benefits you have to be ready, able, willing, and actively seeking full time employment, which you don't do in retirement.
If you work in SC then you don't need to draw unemployment. You, umm, work.
You can draw both unemployment and Social Security in all 50 states.
Justifiable reasons to quit your job and qualify for unemployment in Tennessee include situations such as unsafe working conditions, significant changes in job duties or pay, harassment, or a medical condition that prevents you from performing your job effectively. Additionally, if you are forced to relocate due to a spouse’s job transfer or if you are a caregiver for a family member, these may also be valid reasons. It's important to provide documentation or evidence supporting your claim when applying for unemployment benefits. Always check the specific eligibility criteria with the Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development.