The general answer is yes but with one stipulation, it cannot be for the same injury/illness, as example if you had been injured while serving in the military and been awarded VA benefits for say loss of use of your right arm and subsequently are injured performing a civil service job and apply and receive OWCP benefits for an unrelated injury such as a leg you can receive both benefits concurrently without offset.
yes a teacher can collect workman's compensation as long as they have paid into the system for some time
To collect SSDI you have to prove you are totally disabled and unable to work. Unemployment compensation requires you to be willing, able, and actively seeking full time work immediately. These two concepts are mutually exclusive, so No, you could not collect both at the same time.
Yes, they are separate programs and you can receive both as long as you qualify for each of them separately.
You receive workers compensation because you are unable to work. Under item 2. of the Related Link below, you are not eligible to receive unemployment benefits if you are unable to work. It can't be had both ways or it may be unemployment fraud.
No. You would collect Workman's Compensation benefits because you were unable to work, thus disqualifying you from collecting unemployment (you have to be seeking full time employment to qualify for this).
Yes, you can collect them both at the same time.
Yes, if you qualify under each program. Both Social Security and the State of Michigan allow workers to collect unemployment compensation and Social Security benefits at the same time without applying an offset or penalty to either check.Bear in mind that you have to be actively looking for, and willing to accept, a full-time job, per your unemployment agreement. You can collect retirement benefits as early as age 62, but you can't actually retire while you're also accepting unemployment compensation.
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.
Yes
no . never .
No
You'd have to ask the unemployment office if becoming a student effects your eligibility for unemployment. Getting unemployment benefits does not disqualify you from collecting "GI Bill" or any other financial aid benefits.