No. These benefits are not paid by the states, but by the Federal government, so New York cannot "freeze" them
Social Security is a federal program and the benefits are the same in every state.
Social Security benefits are the same no matter what state you live in. Social Security retirement benefits are based on your earnings record or "credits" and your age.
No. Neither state offsets unemployment benefits by the Social Security benefits.
No, Pennsylvania is not one of the fourteen states that taxes Social Security benefits.
No. New York is not one of the fourteen states that taxes Social Security benefits (retirement or disability).
Social Security benefits are exempt from Ohio state income taxes.
Yes. At present, Missouri taxes Social Security benefits based on total income. This will phase out at the end of the 2010 tax year. There will be no state tax on benefits received in 2011.
No, Louisiana is not one of the fourteen states that taxes Social Security benefits.
Yes
Yes, you can collect both Social Security and unemployment benefits at the same time in Utah, but the state will offset your weekly unemployment check by 50% of the weekly value of your Social Security payments.
yes
You can generally still collect unemployment while collecting social security, unless it is social security disability...even then you still might be able to. I worked for the Unemployment Office & just an FYI, they do not know if you are on social security and are unable to check, so if you do not say anything, they will never know.