Among other qualifications in Illinois you must have lost your job through no fault of your own. This would include resigning, unless of course the reason for resignation was harassment, working conditions or other work conditions that were intolerable. See the Related Link below for more information.
NO. A persn who is incarcerated cannot collect unemployment.
Don't think so as a worker must be able to work to collect unemployment benifits.
no. If your on workers comp. then your still employeed.
Most likely not because it would be the person's fault and not the companies.
No. You can only collect from the "liable state" which the employer pays unemployment taxes to, which in your case is California.
Yes, but a prudent person would report the income to the state's unemployment office to make sure you complied with their reporting requirements and weren't committing unemployment fraud. Receiving income while getting benefits is permissible, just do it by the rules.
A self-employed person may not collect unemployment benefits based on his self employment. See the Related Link below for details.
The maximum Weekly Benefit Amount (WBA) in Illinois for a single person is $388.00 per week. For an unemployed person with a spouse, the weekly benefit amount rises to $462.00 and with a child it is $531.00.
Yes, you can collect unemployment benefits while doing part time work. See "Reporting Part Time Wages" in the Related Link below for more details.
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.
If your teacher's retirement is classified as a pension, you need to contact your unemployment office for clarification. Certain pensions may reduce the amount of unemployment benefits a person receives.
If you disclose this information to the unemployment office, you will be denied benefits. The reason you will be denied is based on your availability to seek and accept immediate full time work. For example, if you are offered a job tomorrow and cannot accept this position based on the fact you are under house arrest, you are not meeting the unemployment requirements of the law. They do not care why you are not available.