6 months then they can consider you for another 6 months.
The state of Kansas has unemployment extension in place after three months of the state reaching unemployment of 6.5 percent. If an extension is granted it is good for 13 months.
In Kansas, you can not draw unemployment if your hours are cut from 40 hours to 32 hours. Unemployment can be drawn if your fired, not just for a cut in hours.
maybe...ask your unemployment dept
Yes
Domenico Gagliardo has written: 'The Kansas industrial court' -- subject(s): Arbitration, Industrial, Industrial Arbitration, Kansas. Court of Industrial Relations, Kansas 'The Kansas labor market, with special reference to unemployment compensation' -- subject(s): Unemployed, Labor and laboring classes, Insurance, Unemployment, Unemployment Insurance
yes!
In many states such as Kansas, no. They are an elected official and Kansas counties do not pay into the Unemployment Tax fund for elected officials in any county office.
As of my last update, I do not have real-time data, including the current unemployment rate in Kansas. To obtain the most accurate and up-to-date information, I recommend checking the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics website or the Kansas Department of Labor's official site. These sources typically provide the latest statistics on employment and unemployment rates.
Yes, in every state
The maximum amounts not only are determined by the individual states, but it also depends on the qualifying workers history, wages earned, number of dependents (in some cases), etc.
Interesting question. I think it depends on how far the job moved. Like, if you have a job in Kansas City Kansas and it moves to Kansas City Missouri - being adjoining cities - probably not because you could still drive to work. I'm sure if your job was moved farther away, your employer would terminate your employment and you could draw unemployment. Phone your local unemployment office and ask.
You must look at the 941 form for this information.