You can go to school while on unemployment, so long as you are eligible otherwise (like you lost your job due to no fault of your own). However, you are supposed to be able and available to accept a job, so if you are offered work but it interferes with your school hours, you will no longer be eligible for unemployment for refusing work.
NO... if you are not looking for work you cannot collect
No, to collect unemployment benefits you have to be able and actively seeking full time work, among other requirements, which you cannot while imprisoned. After release, it would depend on your work history during the base period for Georgia.
Check the Related Link below for information on approved training/education allowed while collecting unemployment benefits.
yes
No
In general, no. In order to collect unemployment, you must be seeking employment, and accepting it when found. While in prison, that's not going to happen.
This is very doubtful. To collect unemployment you must, usually, be unemployed due to no fault of your own. While going back to school is an admirable idea, it is still attributable to you that you are unemployed. Beyond that, unemployment always requires that you be ready, willing, and able to work, and going to school - especially full-time - typically prevents you from meeting this qualification.
yes you can
You cannot collect unemployment while you collect wages, so if you are paid while on maternity leave, you probably cannot collect unemployment. You should contact the nearest office of the Colorado Department of Labor to know for certain. You can probably google "Colorado Department of Labor" and send them an email to ask. If you can collect unemployment you'll have to contact that office anyway, to get the paperwork.
No. To be eligible for unemployment benefits, you must be available for work. If you are incarcerated, you are not available for work.
Yes, you may be eligible to collect unemployment benefits while waiting for your new job to start, as long as you meet the requirements set by your state's unemployment insurance program. It is important to check with your state's unemployment office for specific guidelines and eligibility criteria.
Yes