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I work for the Employment Security Commission (Uncemplyment) in NC. Here is what you do....You can file in NJ, but who you file against is going to depend upon what taxes were taken out of your wages during the base period you are filing for. For example, the base period as of now is April 1, 2005 to March 30, 2006. The wages you earned during this time frams are what they are going to look at to establish the claim. If you earned these wages in NY, then you go to the Employment security Commission (ESC) in NJ and file an "interstate claim" against the state of NY. If you earned wages in both states during that time or had taxes taken out for both states, then you go to the ESC in NJ and file a "combined wage claim" If you had NJ taxes taken out only, then you would file against NJ. In any case, it can all be done within your resideing state.

2006-07-03 04:07:12 · answer #1 · answered by rahkokwee 5 · 2 0

you file in NY not NJ b/c that is who hold the unemployment tax

where you fired or quit if you quit you can not receive benefits

2006-07-03 04:04:09 · answer #2 · answered by goz1111 7 · 0 0

file in NJ and they will contact NY and get it from them

2006-07-03 04:04:57 · answer #3 · answered by island3girl 6 · 0 0

if you work in NY you, then are not unemployed.
if you are unemployed and live in NJ, then you are unemployed in NJ

2006-07-03 05:11:14 · answer #4 · answered by campana 1 · 0 0

State of residence

2006-07-03 04:01:16 · answer #5 · answered by jlimages 3 · 0 0

if your working dont worry about it

2006-07-03 04:02:03 · answer #6 · answered by nate diggitty 4 · 0 0

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