Among many reasons Texas will allow you to collect unemployment is if you were fired through no work related faults of your own (i.e. misconduct, thievery, violation of company policy, etc.). See the Related Link below for more details.
If you qualified, you can collect unemployment from Texas, the "liable state", but not from the state you move to.
yes - but you need to change your address with the Texas Workforcve commission or your checks won't find you
Not in Minnesota, but you might be able to collect unemployment in Texas. However, I suspect not.
Yes, but there are qualifications involved. Check "How Do I Qualify" in the Related Link below.
No. You are not supposed to receive unemployment if you were fired "for cause," meaning you did something wrong. If you apply for unemployment, the employer has an opportunity to dispute your eligibility, in which case your application will be rejected. There is a chance the employer will not take that opportunity.
If you were fired for criminal misconduct it is likely that you will not get unemployment.
if you were fired for a company policy can you still collect unemployment in new jersey?
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Probably not. To receive unemployment you have to be willing and able to work.
Yes, you will still be able to receive unemployment. I am not sure if the amount of severence has anything to do with it though. I received a severence and still qualified for max unemployment benefits.
You can collect unemployment is you are fired from you job. You age doesn't matter when it comes to unemployment.
In most cases, a person can not draw unemployment when they were fired for falling asleep. To draw unemployment, a person needs to be fired for doing the job incorrectly, or job performance. You should still file for benefits and see if you get approved.
Yes, you are still entitled to receive child support even if you are receiving unemployment.
can you close out your 401k and still receive unemployment benefits
You probably can't collect unemployment if you quit. http://jobsearch.about.com/cs/unemployment/a/unemployment.htm
Yes.