Unemployment Insurance (UI) is granted to those individuals who were laid off (usually because of lack of work) from their job. If you quit a job of your own accord, you may still be able to collect under certain conditions.
Another answer:In most states, depending on the reason you quit it IS possible to collect unemployment for quitting, such as spouse's relocation/transfer, harassment/abuse at work, hazardous conditions of employment, domestic violence, etc. Check with your own state's employment security office for clarification.Due to layoff, termination due to causes not your own, and in certain cases where you have to quit because of illness or family crisis.....
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.
Your collecting unemployment before has no bearing on your ability to do so now. All that matters is if you qualify under the current conditions and with your latest employer(s)
yes. nannies can actually collect unemployment
Yes, under certain circumstances the state allows you to collect unemployment and not seek work. See the Related Link below for hull details.
You can collect unemployment only if you qualify under state law - you have no income and you are actively seeking work, and you were not fired for a disqualifying reason.
Yes, if you qualify under the laws of California. It falls under the interstate unemployment benefits agreement that the states are signed up with.
You can, but unemployment will deduct the amount from your unemployment benefits
No. You can't collect unemployment anywhere for merely retiring.
NO. A persn who is incarcerated cannot collect unemployment.
Yes. In the Related link below, page 5, "Are You Eligible for Benefits"; "Disqualifications"; 1) there are 9 reasons under which you can quit your job and still collect benefits.
You can collect unemployment is you are fired from you job. You age doesn't matter when it comes to unemployment.
Yes, it may be possible, depending on what your state's rules are on working conditions that might qualify for unemployment benefits, even if you were to quit.