This could have a couple of meanings. Your status will read 'not paid' until they process your request or re certify you for a new benefit year. Initial claims could take up to six weeks to process, while re certification takes two to three weeks. (Their numbers, not mine.) So your status will read 'not paid' in either of these situations. I assume that they will notify you if the claim is pending, denied or under investigation in some other way. However, it is possible that it may read the same in any of these situations because, in fact, it has not been paid. I'm from Alabama and every state may also have a different system with some other terminology and/or status labels. It may be best to simply call your unemployment benefit provider and ask them to be sure what the issue is. At least then you will have a definite answer and may alert them to a human or computer error if you are receiving this status as a mistake.
who will i get in touch with about my claim being call but cant get through
Because all employment benefits are paid from a state unemployment fund, the balance is reserved for any remaining claims.
In Washington, you can file for an interstate unemployment claim if you use to work in Washington and was fired or laid off and now live another state. Even though you moved out of state, you will still be paid unemployment benefits through Washington.
The unemployment taxes (which are paid ONLY by the businesses) paid into the state's unemployment benefit fund, are decided by each state as to terms and conditions.
Your unemployment benefits usually stop as soon as you have earned (but not necessarily been paid for) work. If the job did not pan out, you can re-open your original claim. as long as you are in your base and benefit periods.
No. State regulations will exclude people paid by commission from unemployment benefits.
No. First any unemployment claim requires a work history, including amount of wages you were paid. Second, you have to have been a wage earner working for someone else, not the owner and controller of your own income.
You cannot collect unemployment while you collect wages, so if you are paid while on maternity leave, you probably cannot collect unemployment. You should contact the nearest office of the Colorado Department of Labor to know for certain. You can probably google "Colorado Department of Labor" and send them an email to ask. If you can collect unemployment you'll have to contact that office anyway, to get the paperwork.
Unemployment benefits are paid by the state which in turn collects its funds from the business. The employee does not pay into the fund.
I moved from Washington to Missouri, I found a job right away but it was seasonal. When I was laid off for the winter I had not worked long enough in MO to be eligible for unemployment thru Missouri, so my claim was paid out of Washington (at that state's maximum amount). It was definately a benefit because it paid more than Missouri would have. In fact, I received more in unemployment per week than I got paid per week in Missouri
unemployment
Nope. Unemployment is for when you are not working, If you are driving and getting paid, you are working.
Generally, Realtors do not qualify for unemployment because they are in a class of 'independent contractors' who are on a commission paid basis instead of wages. Most state disallow this category, so the Realtor couldn't collect because of that and because he had a regular job.