You wish!! If you are on unemployment in Georgia, but now live in Tennessee, you would apply for unemployment in Tennessee. Your records would transfer and you would be paid in the state where you live.
Another answer:You can only draw unemployment from the "liable state", Georgia in your case, because that is the state that your employer paid the unemployment taxes, through the payroll taxes, to. You might file with Tennessee, but they would only be helping you receive the benefits from Georgia.Whichever state the employer pays its unemployment taxes to is the"liable" state. If you WORK in Georgia, as well as live there, it probably is Georgia. In any event, both states are probably involved in the interstate unemployment benefits program where you can apply to either and they would work it out between themselves.
You can draw both unemployment and Social Security in all 50 states.
Yes both are US States.
Because they are 2 different issues in 2 different states, you should check out the criteria for both in both states. If they conflict, and are not allowed by one or both states, you could be guilty of unemployment fraud. Tread carefully and do due diligence to find out where you stand.
no
Alabama is located east in relation of Georgia.
No they were both slave states.
Alabama and Georgia both border Florida.
You need to check with both offices. Obviously you are collecting an accumulative benefit through the interstate agreement of the states and earned in the respective base periods of both.
It isn't a question of whether you were in a 'previous state' but whether you had qualified earned income credits and other requirements to receive those benefits. If you weren't qualified there, then no, otherwise, yes.
Athens.
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.