If you have exhausted your unemployment extensions (they vary with each state), try contacting the social services or human resources department of your state for suggestions. There are many services available for people in your situation during these turbulent times. There is help out there.
Welfare
You notify the unemployment commission, stop collecting benefits (unemployment is not an entitlement, it is something you receive as a benefit to help you get through a period when you are unemployed by no fault of your own), and move happily into your new position of employment.
No, if you quit your job, you are no longer eligible for unemployment insurance benefits.
No. If you quit your job, you are not eligible for Unemployment benefits.
apply for welfare
You can apply for unemployment benefits when you lose your job through no fault of your own and meet the eligibility requirements set by your state's unemployment insurance program.
You can claim unemployment benefits when you lose your job through no fault of your own and meet the eligibility requirements set by your state's unemployment insurance program.
Generall not since unemployment benefits are related to earned income from losing a job.
In North Carolina, you can generally only collect unemployment benefits if you are terminated through no fault of your own. If you are fired, most of the time you cannot collect unemployment benefits.
no
No. You receive unemployment BECAUSE you have no job.
Unfortunately, retiring does not qualify you for unemployment benefits. You need to have lost your job, etc., not just retire.
You can't get unemployment when you quit a job. You can only receive benefits if you lose your job through no fault/decision of your own.