You should be able collect a partial from that employer. However, if you worked somewhere before that, your wages from the previous employer would also count towards your unemployment even though you did not get laid off from there.
2007-08-04 09:55:19
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answer #1
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answered by SelfGrill 3
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Based upon the information I found, No, you can't claim it.
To establish a payable claim, you must have received enough wages to meet the requirements. We use the wages paid to you during a recent 12-month period, called the base period, to calculate your benefit amounts. The base period is the first four of the last five completed calendar quarters before you filed your claim. (Calendar quarters are three-month periods beginning with January, April, July, or October.) This means that when we calculate benefits we can't use earnings in the calendar quarter in which you filed your claim, or the quarter just before that. We base your weekly benefit amount on the highest quarter earnings in your base period. We divide that high quarter's total earnings by 25 to get your weekly benefit amount. We may have to change this amount to be inside the allowed range of benefit amounts in Texas. Your maximum, or total, benefit amount is the smaller of 26 times the weekly amount, or 27% of all your wages in the base period. Your weekly benefit amount will be between $56 and $364 depending upon the wages you earned.
2007-08-04 16:55:54
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answer #2
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answered by magnolia 5
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Earn extra, from home in your spare time...Make Easy Money giving Surveys online. Make up to $25 per hour.
2007-08-04 17:38:20
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answer #3
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answered by muffin_top 1
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If you worked someplace before them during the year before you got laid off, then you might be eligible. Otherwise, probably not, but it doesn't cost anything to apply.
2007-08-04 17:16:06
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answer #4
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answered by Judy 7
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check this link its good
http://workathomedataentryworkss.blogspot.com
.
2007-08-05 04:11:16
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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