Yes, but you have to file for unemployment in PA.
Correction:You cannot be paid by Pennsylvania, as they are not the "liable state" that collected the unemployment taxes from your former employer. Only North Carolina pays, but you can continue to collect from NC. You might contact the PA office to assist you through the interstate unemployment claims program, however.
You can collect both Social Security and unemployment security benefits in all 50 states at the same time. Only 4 states (Illinois, Louisiana, Utah, and Virginia) offset unemployment by some part of the Social Security benefit.
When I moved from Massachusetts to NC in 1990 I was not able to collect due to the fact that I left my job in Mass voluntarily and was not laid off. If you were laid off in RI you might be able to collect but you should have opened a unemployment claim in RI first. <><> If you weren't already collecting it in Rhode Island, nor were eligible to, you also cannot collect in in North Carolina because it is not the "liable" state, in which you had a work history.
No. Social Security is exempt from offsets to unemployment in North Carolina.
One can find information about unemployment in North Carolina from a number of different sources. The North Carolina Employment Security Commission has information, as does their website.
pennsylvania
The distance from north Carolina to Pennsylvania is 368 miles going -168N.
North Carolina
The "liable state", South Carolina in this case, is who pays your benefits because that was where you worked and your employer paid the unemployment taxes.
yes
JUly 13
It depends on whether you were already receiving unemployment, and if not, then it depends on the reason you had relocated.
How long will a pending adjudication take for unemployment benefits in North Carolina