If you are fired from a job, through no fault of your own, you may be eligible for unemployment benefits. For the first 20 weeks, unemployment will be paid by your previous employer, after that, the state of New Mexico will pay the unemployment benefits.
Probably not.Another answer:Only the "liable state" (the one where your employer pays its unemployment taxes to) is the one you receive your unemployment compensation from.
He's not. The employer is the one who pays the state unemployment taxes.
people who don't work
Unemployment is not one of the deductions from a worker's paycheck. The employer, only, pays for unemployment insurance.
The four states with the highest unemployment rate in 1934 are South Dakota, Idaho, Oklahoma and New Mexico.
The "liable state", South Carolina in this case, is who pays your benefits because that was where you worked and your employer paid the unemployment taxes.
Whichever state the employer pays its unemployment taxes to is the"liable" state. If you WORK in Georgia, as well as live there, it probably is Georgia. In any event, both states are probably involved in the interstate unemployment benefits program where you can apply to either and they would work it out between themselves.
Unemployment is available to folks who lost their last job through no fault of their own, and are actively seeking new employment. Workers comp is a social insurance that pays the medical bills of folks injured on the job, and pays lost time benefits if one misses work due to injury.
This depends on where you work and how your pay check is issued, ie which state your unemployment insurance is paid to. The state that INSURES you against unemployment is the one that pays you. Do not confuse this with tax filing as you will file taxes in the state that you reside.Also relevant is the fact that you can move to another state after you turn unemployed and still collect your unemployment money from our earlier host state. Do bear that in mind.
56 unemployment
It sounds like there is more to the story than what is told here. If you lost your job through no fault of your own, the unemployment investigators would check out all the facts in the case. If you were innocent, you would most likely collect benefits. If, under New Mexico's laws you were in the wrong, you would not.
Something sounds wrong here and should be checked into. In ALL states, the employers, not the employees, pay the unemployment taxes based on the wages the employer pays his workers. Also, only the state of Pennsylvania should be involved.