Apparently not, because to, qualify you had to work and earn wages during the first 4 quarters of the previous 5 completed quarters.
No, and yes. You can't collect from Florida because it is not a "liable state" (which pays the benefit, from where you had worked, if at all). However, it can act as your "agent state" and assist you filing for any benefits you are entitled to in another state if you had worked in a base year and hadn't filed for unemployment in that state yet.
Yes, and you would file in Florida because it is the "liable state" which collected employment taxes from the employer you worked for.
It would be for the state you worked in, you can not draw unemployment from a state other than the one you worked in.
The new unemployment extension will last 13 weeks in Florida. Check your eligibility & claim benefits at your unemployment office www.unemployment.001webs.com
In florida they take 40% of my unemployment
No. You only collect unemployment benefits from the "liable state" (which collected payroll taxes from the employer an applicant had worked for). However, if you had worked in another state during the current base year for that state, the "agent state" (where you live) can help you collect from that state.
The Unemployment Compensation provisions have undergone many changes through the years; and, the procedures for qualifying for eligibility have been revised as well, varying in one manner or another from state to state. The best resource you have is the local unemployment office for the state in which you now reside. If it is different from that where you were laid-off, you are still considered unemployed until you attain employment status; and, if you expect to be considered eligible for benefits, you need to meet their criteria, the first part of which is registration. It is not customarily a mandatory provision for receiving unemployment benefits that you refrain from changing your residence to anywhere other than out-of-country or prison, in which case you would no longer qualify.Interstate Unemployment BenefitsYes, you can continue to collect benefits from the state in which you originally filed your claim. Unemployment benefits are not public assistance, you worked for it, it is your money.Your new state of residency does not pay the benefits, they will come from the state in which you were eligible, but you will still need to follow the requirements for eligibility.Contact the office of the state agency that handles unemployment benefits in the state where you relocate as soon as possible to avoid a delay in receiving your benefits.
Because Florida is the "liable" state (where your employer had paid your ;payroll taxes to), your unemployment benefits would continue to be paid by that state. You need to contact Florida's employment security office for information on continuing to receive your benefits.
Under the Interstate Unemployment Agreement provisions you could file in either, but preferably in New York since it is the "liable state" which collected the unemployment taxes from your employer.
Yes you most certainly can.
You will need to apply for unemployment in the state that you were employed.
Only the "liable state" pays the benefits. That is the state where you worked when you lost your job. You can apply through another "agency state" to help in receiving those benefits from the liable state, however.