Presumably, at your age, you are still in school. To qualify for benefits, among other things, you have to be ready, willing and able to accept full time employment and be actively seeking it. A student would be hard pressed to comply with these requirements.
No. You have to have a current work history.
California unemployment eligibility requires that you have earned a certain amount of wages in the state within a recent (usually within the past 2 years) 12 month period. Six years is too long.
You don't collect unemployment based on the years you were employed. Employers ONLY, pay unemployment through the payroll taxes to the state ,which in turn, pays unemployment benefits based on work history, wages earned in the base period (and you or the company re-locating 300 miles sounds like entitlement). Contact your state employment security office for clarification on your qualification. P.S. You pay into the Social Security system, which you can draw on after you turn 62 (minimum)
I worked for 30 years and retired at 60 - started collecting my pension but went back to work in another job for 3 months and then got laid off. Am I able to collect unemployment and does it comefrom the 30 year job or the 3 month job.
10 year's
You collect disability only if you show that you are unable to perform work, not that you worked as long as you have. If you worked eight years and there are justifiable reasons for quitting, as determined by your state's employment security office then you might be eligible for unemployment benefits. This has nothing to do with the Social Security you are presently receiving.
Yes it is possible but what happens is that the unemployment benefits for the state you were receiving/living in will be terminated and you will be forced to reapply in your new state. slightly complicated process but many people do it as they move to another state in search of work.
Washington became a state in 1889. So today, Washington is 119 years old.
Probably not, as most, if not all. states require a work history covering the las 5 calendar quarters. Check with your state's employment security office for clarification of your state's laws on the matter.
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.
Not really. The actual answer is yes, but your unemployment benefits are based on how much income you had over the most recent either 2 or 3 years (from what I recall), so if you work one day, you will not have had enough income to receive any benefits.
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