If your teacher's retirement is classified as a pension, you need to contact your unemployment office for clarification. Certain pensions may reduce the amount of unemployment benefits a person receives.
You can only collect unemployment benefits from the "liable state", where the employer paid unemployment taxes, so Missouri would not pay you benefits, as you described it.
Absolutely. It is called your "Retirement Pension". You cannot collect "unemployment insurance" monies if you are retired.
Yes, you can collect unemployment benefits in California while receiving Social Security retirement benefits. However, your unemployment benefits may be affected by the amount of your Social Security income, as the state may reduce your unemployment payments based on your retirement benefits. It's advisable to check with the California Employment Development Department (EDD) for specific eligibility requirements and potential impacts on your benefits.
You cannot collect absolute retirement (meaning not returning to work) and unemployment benefits because the latter requires you to, among many things, continuously seek full time employment.
According to the Related Link below, severance pay will not affect your unemployment benefits.
Because question #19 on ?Florida's application for unemployment addresses Retirement Pensions, it is possible to file when you have one, but it could also affect the amount of your benefits.
Yes, you can collect both. According to the Missouri Department of Labor and Industrial Relations, neither severance pay nor Social Security benefits reduce your unemployment compensation.
If you are referring to "defer retirement benefits" as meaning Social Security benefits, there is no need to defer the decision. As long as you can qualify for each of the benefits individually, you can collect both at the same time. They do not interfere with each other at all. Any other retirement programs would be handled by offsetting unemployment benefits by the employer paid portion of retirements on a weekly basis.
I don't know but if you find out let me know
Retiring is not an acceptable reason to qualify for unemployment benefits, especially if your retirement means you are not going to be ready, willing and actively seeking employment - (criteria for eligibility).
Yes. Although you must report any earnings you receive while getting unemployment benefits, the Related Link below says you do not have to report the Social Security benefits, meaning it does not affect your unemployment.
yes