In Michigan, that is where you worked, but if you also file in California ( not to get benefits but to register as unemployed ) you can take advantage of their job location service
Since that is paid by your last employer, not likely. Apply for SSI
Yes, (at least in California) there is a special unemployment form to be filled out if you have worked for the federal government but after that, the process proceeds as usual.,
Yes. If you had worked in Utah and qualified for your unemployment there, you can move to another state and collect unemployment benefits from Utah as long as you complied with Utah's requirements. It is an interstate agreement that is allowed.
Yes, they do. Unemployment is a federal program led by the Department of Labor. In order to receive payments, you must have worked the previous 12 months.
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.
I worked in Ma but like in Nh where do I file for unemployment ?
It depends upon the conditions of your work. If you worked as an unpaid volunteer, then your cannot receive unemployment benefits on that basis. If you were a paid employee, then you can.
It would be for the state you worked in, you can not draw unemployment from a state other than the one you worked in.
If you worked for someone and you didn't voluntarily resign, you might be eligible for unemployment.
Strictly speaking, no. If you haven't worked and become eligible for benefits from North Carolina, you can only receive them from California, providing you were eligible back there. What you can do, however, again if you had qualified, is to apply through the North Carolina office to receive them from the "liable state" (CA) through the interstate unemployment program.
No, it is not hard. The Related Link below refers to partial benefits due to reduced earnings, etc.
If I live in Washinton but worked in Idaho whre do I file for unemployment?