How does my spouse protest for unemployment in IL after taking another job she didnt like?
anonymous
1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
How does my spouse protest for unemployment in IL after taking another job she didnt like?
Nine answers:
anonymous
2016-05-18 16:26:01 UTC
Probably not, but I would file in California anyway, that is where the unemployment insurance was paid. Maybe your employer (if you were there a long time) will give the go ahead to let you collect it. When you get to Ohio I would immedatley go to the local unemployment office and apply. If after a certain amount of time goes by and you still have not found a job in your field of work, you could collect it.
kapn
2012-08-30 10:08:51 UTC
No.......she took available work then quit............you can appeal if you wish............
Heather
2012-08-30 08:58:31 UTC
Your spouse is unemployed by personal choice. She chose to resign. She also chose to quit her temp job. Your spouse does not qualify for unemployment because she was not laid off through no fault of her own. Your spouse does not want to work and earn a paycheck or she would not have quit her last job. She is not eligible for unemployment. An appeal will not change the personal decisions she made.Your spouse should consider this a painful learning experience.
Slickterp
2012-08-30 08:25:24 UTC
No one can FORCE her to resign. She resigned. Then she quit the new job.
No way to protest it. She is voluntarily unemployed.
M W
2012-08-30 08:18:22 UTC
She resigned her teaching job - that's like quitting. She quit the short term job. She quit both jobs, you don't get unemployment if you quit.
the operative word here is QUIT.
EDIT: I live in Illinois and it's almost impossible to get rid of a teacher. The gave her a break by asking for her resignation. The other process of her being fired would have been very ugly.
Briana W
2012-08-30 07:21:03 UTC
No she quit a job after a month and a half because "it wasn't for her" and "she didn't like it". Wow, really. Many people don't really like a job at first, but if they want a paycheck and money to survive on they stick it out until they find something else. Unemployment doesn't look at a previous job, they look at the most recent one there was a separation from.
Judy
2012-08-30 08:19:26 UTC
Uh, you don't just get to quit a job because you don't like it and then get unemployment.
The unemployment fund would go broke fast if everyone who didn't like their job just quit and lived off unemployment.
Genegee
2012-08-30 07:18:24 UTC
Lucas, instead of defending your lady to the end, may l suggest you contact the school and carmly listen to the other side of the story. Remember their are two sides to every story, you only heard one side.
?
2012-08-30 07:12:44 UTC
No. Since she quit her last job, the temp position, the state views it as voluntary separation. You cannot claim unemployment insurance for a voluntary separation or a lawful termination. You can only qualify for unemployment benefits by being wrongfully terminated, or being employed but recieving no hours.
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