Yes, as long as you continued to call in your claim each week you were unemployed. Even if you were originally denied, filed an appeal and had your hearing; resulting in an overturn of the original decision, you will collect all weeks you were unemployed except for the one week waiting period which starts the week you actually filed your claim. If you happened to be employed at the date of your hearing, it doesn't matter. You will be able to collect all the weeks you were unemployed (minus 1 week). Also, if your hearing ends up being denied, you still have the option to appeal to the Board. You need to be very thorough with your documentation, as you will not get another hearing. The Board of Appeal's committee makes the final decision after reviewing your documents and the tape recorded session from your hearing.
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.
I work at Subway and am offered no benefits. Subway is a franchise with different owners so it's the Subway franchise owner's decision to what they offer their employees. The employees at the Subway I work don't want benefits anyways because they're too expensive.
Get a lawyerAnother answer:Because appeals are your right, ask the agency denying you, for the procedure you need to follow to appeal their decision.
A decision which is made as the result of something happening. A proactive decision is one which is made in case something happens. A retroactive decision is one which affects something which has already happened e.g. if a person is awarded a salary increase on June 1st, retroactive to February it means that they will receive back pay for the month of February-May.
If you are referring to the "early retirement" meaning Social Security, you can receive SS's benefits at the same time as your unemployment, as they are separate programs. Advisability as to the timing of when to begin drawing SS is a personal decision based on your economics.
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.
Being denied unemployment benefits can be appealed, in which case the decision is reversed, if warranted, or upheld. In the latter case you would have to start over with a new work history to qualify. Refiling with the same work history/information is not the thing to do.
This depends on many factors. Firstly, unemployment benefits differ from state to state. Also relevant in the calculation is the number of weeks and hours you previously worked, the amount you were paid, and how long you worked for. Bear in mind that you are not automatically entitled to unemployment but rather it is a decision that is made based on your application and while on unemployment you must be actively looking for jobs.
It would be helpful to know what the decision is to know what the benefits and opportunity of the decision are. It is important to include this information.
As the frontline employees have more skill and experience in the industry they are suitable for decision making. Also they are the senior employees of the company that too helps in the decision making as they very well know the culture of the company.
To collect unemployment benefits you must be ready, willing, and able to work. If you are not, you may fare better applying for disability benefits, if your problems are documented by a health professional and pervasive enough to qualify you. Many states will not provide unemployment benefits to individuals who voluntarily quit their job without cause (where "cause" is something about the environment that a reasonable person would not tolerate). You may have "cause", and then you may not have "cause" - it depends on the specifics of the rules of the state you are applying in, and the specifics of your situation. There is nothing to lose by filing for unemployment benefits and letting the agency make the decision. Make sure you document everything very specifically so they have all the pertinent information before making a decision.
According to this 9News article IT DOES! See the Related Link below. This is further substantiated by the other Related Link below, in that it was the basis for the decision. An article approximately 7 months old details how "Jackson" lost his UI benefits