It depends on what your state's unemployment rate is and what Federal Laws are passed to help the unemployed.
Initial claim is for 13 weeks. Extension is additional 7 weeks for a total of 20 weeks.
Two stops before returning home.
It bounces 134 times before it stops.
that is a foolish question
Yes, but only for the total of 99 weeks as before. The problem the law, signed in 2010, solved was the money had run out for those entitled to the 99 weeks but who hadn't collected what they still had credit coming for. In other words you can receive up to 99 weeks now.
According to the Texas formula, the max one can receive is 415 per week. It is up in the air about how many weeks one can draw. The original amount was for 26 weeks but congress has passed legislation which can increase it to 52 weeks and beyond.
I'm pretty sure that the "stimulus plan" does not allow that, any more than your state unemployment compensation plan does. Where I live (Ohio) the only change in unemployment compensation has been an extension in benefit periods, and even that has expired.Another answer:As many state unemployment laws DO provide benefits for reduced hours, it stands to reason that any extensions would follow suit.
They can make 3 stops before lunch and 5 stops after lunch to travel 120 miles and 222 miles, respectively, with the same number of stops.
Titanic had stops in England, France, and Ireland.
their are 5 stops it has to make before reaching trinidad to london
Extension has three syllables.
Normally in the U.S. the unemployment rate is measured by the number of people filing for and receiving unemployment compensation. However, many failed to find employment before their unemployment compensation expired, or they had to settle for part-time employment or a job that pays less than that for which they are trained and experienced. The determination of the true unemployment rate involves the endeavor to count those people as well.