It would be rare if you did, as benefits are generally awarded for loss of jobs due to work conditions and not through your own fault. Cancer is something neither you nor your employer could do anything to prevent.
In general, no. In order to collect unemployment, you must be seeking employment, and accepting it when found. While in prison, that's not going to happen.
You cannot collect when you have voluntarily left a job. Has to be a lay off or firing... can you collect if hes out of work and found another job in California
Educated unemployment is mostly found in INDIA. This unemployment is because of high population rate.
To collect unemployment benefits, contact your local state employment security office, or its equivalent, to file your claim. The Social Security application needs to be through the local Social Security Administration's office, information can be found online.
Refer to page 17 of the Handbook found in the Related Link below for information on partial benefits.
Details of unemployment enrollment can be found at the Related Link below.
You usually cannot collect unemployment if you voluntarily leave a job, or if you are fired "for cause."If you were hired and then found out the job involved something you couldn't do even with "reasonable accomodation" or just didn't want to do and you quit, you probably won't be able to collect unemployment.But there's no reason you couldn't go to the unemployment office and talk to them anyway, there might be some kind of exception. For instance, if at the time you were hired the job didn't require you to lift 200 pound boxes and suddenly that was added to your job after you'd been doing it for a while, that might be considered "constructive dismissal" (basically, this usually means that your employer wants to get rid of you but doesn't want to have to pay unemployment, so they deliberately make your job miserable in hopes that you'll quit). You generally can collect unemployment in such a case, but the employer either doesn't understand the rules, or hopes that you don't, so that you won't bother to even apply and/or won't try to fight it if they deny unemployment.
It depends. Because you have to report all income you receive while getting unemployment benefits, you may qualify for those benefits if the income is less than the benefit by some formula. The exact information is in the Related Link below.However, if you fail to report said income it is called unemployment fraud (a crime) That information can be found in the other Related Link below.
Yes you can. There is a formula that you can look up on the ODJFS website that will tell you the proportion of how your unemployment is adjusted based on the wages you earn. Like myself I did odd jobs for cash, while I did not have to report it, I did. And I was glad. It does not adjust dollar for dollar, in my case I had to make over $800 in a week before I would receive $0 in unemployment. But why I was happy I did, it allowed my unemployment to last longer payment wise. It allowed me to take more time to find the RIGHT job, and not just the first job.
Yes. It has been found, however, that for some reason some states (Virginia, for example ) reduce the amount of your unemployment compensation by the amount of your SS, which they should not because they are 2 separate and distinct programs that have no bearing on the purpose of each other. You should check with your own state for its handling of the matter.
b. Because scientists found smoking causes cancer
If you have officially retired - no - you cannot file for unemployment. Besides - when your last employer was notified and found out about it they would undoubtedly contest it, and you would be up the creek without a paddle for filing a false claim.