Generally, if you were fired as a result of your own wrong doing (the fault was yours), then no. However, if you felt it was unjustified you can always appeal the employment agency's decision.
In Washington, you can file for an interstate unemployment claim if you use to work in Washington and was fired or laid off and now live another state. Even though you moved out of state, you will still be paid unemployment benefits through Washington.
Yes. You can receive unemployment benefits from whatever 'liable state' you worked in. You can apply directly to that state or through the one you live in, known as Interstate claim, who will then transfer your claim to the right state.
You would file your claim with the "liable state", Tennessee, but you might ask Arkansas to assist you in collecting the benefits.
To file an interstate claim in Georgia, you should first determine your eligibility by checking the state's unemployment insurance website for guidelines. You can file your claim online through the Georgia Department of Labor's website or by calling their customer service. If you are filing from another state, you’ll need to provide information about your previous employment and may need to contact your home state's unemployment office for specific instructions. Ensure you have all necessary documentation ready, such as your Social Security number and work history.
Unemployment has to be filed to the state unemployment office. If you are living in California, you need to file a claim "http://www.edd.ca.gov/Unemployment/Filing_a_Claim.htm". Search for your state using a search engile like http://www.google.com for State Unemployment Claim and fill the form online for your state.
You file for unemployment in the "liable state". In this case, you work in Iowa, the "liable state", but because of the interstate unemployment compensation laws, you can file in a state other than the "liable" one and they will work with the other state to help you.
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.
Interstate unemployment is merely the agreement between the "liable state" ( the one owing the benefits because the worker worked in that state) and the "agent state" where the worker is now. The agent state, apparently Texas in this case, will assist the unemployed worker receive his benefits from the other state.
If you live in MS but worked in TN, you will file your claim for unemployment insurance against the state where your wages were reported. Contact your Human Resources or Payroll department. They should be able to tell you if the employer paid unemployment taxes to MS on your behalf or only to TN. TN takes unemployment claims by telephone or over the Internet, from out of state residents.
ARKANSAS
The employer pays its unemployment taxes to the state the employer is located in. You might file your claim with the state you live in, but your state would then process the claim through the "liable state".
However, the whitetail deer (Odocoileus virginianus) was adopted as the Arkansas State Mammal by the Seventy-ninth General Assembly of 1993.