If you already receive unemployment benefits, you only need to notify the unemployment office about change of address. If you are quitting your job, through no fault of your employer, then it would be considered a voluntary quit and you would not be eligible for unemployment.
California unemployment eligibility requires that you have earned a certain amount of wages in the state within a recent (usually within the past 2 years) 12 month period. Six years is too long.
Check the base period in the Related Link below to see if the period between end of work and filing of your claim is within the boundaries.
You can not collect unemployment if you are retired or working.
In most states you cannot collect unemployment if you were self-employed. It is advised one check for specific unemployment laws within their state.
probably stays FOREVER, but the insurance company is concerned with moving violations within three years
Yes it is possible but what happens is that the unemployment benefits for the state you were receiving/living in will be terminated and you will be forced to reapply in your new state. slightly complicated process but many people do it as they move to another state in search of work.
That would depend on how much the annuity pays out. The regulators calculate your income sources and will apportion a payout of U.I. if your income falls within the allowable amount.
Structural Unemployment
within 3%
You may have to speak directly with your state's labor department that handles UI. It's up to them if you were let go due to circumstances within or outside of your control.
Yes, if you worked in the previous state within the base period (normally in the last 15 months in most states), then your unemployment benefits would include the total wages earned anywhere in that period. Contact the employment security office you are working with and they will assist you in
Of course they can as long as they have put in the required time employed and that their taxes were paid in by the employer. But you have to have been laid off or fired. You can not quit a job and expect to draw unemployment