Certainly depends on the specific coverage your speaking of (and some private coverages may cover short periods of unemployment after certain qualifying periods of working in a field), but one basic premise of disability insurance is the disability is keeping you from doing a job that you would be earning an income from.
In order to collect unemployment benefits, you must be physically able to work. In order to get disability benefits, you must NOT be able to work. So you can't have it both ways.
There is no prohibition in any state to marrying anyone who has or will collect state Unemployment Insurance benefits.
Unemployment benefits may be garnished to collect child support, but it seems unlikely that someone in jail would be eligible for unemployment benefits.
Disability benefits are received if you are unable to work. Unemployment is paid if you are able to work and actively searching for employment. These two definitions are contradictory, so you won't be able to legally collect disability benefits and unemployment.
If you're currently disabled and unable to work, you should apply for disability income benefits through your state.
You can collect unemployment after state disability if you are healthy enough to return to work, and your employer terminated your employment during your disability. The termination can not be related to your job performance.
No, because there is no tax deductions in your disability which entitles you to receive unemployment.
You can, but unemployment will deduct the amount from your unemployment benefits
No you can't collect from both disability and unemployment at the same time. Disability provides income replacement if you are physically unable to work. Unemployment replaces income for those able to work, but out of work due to job loss.
Yes. Both Social Security and the State of Pennsylvania allow workers to collect unemployment compensation and Social Security benefits at the same time without applying an offset or penalty to either check.Bear in mind that you have to be actively looking for, and willing to accept, a full-time job, per your unemployment agreement. You can collect retirement benefits as early as age 62, but you can't actually retire if you're also accepting unemployment compensation.
no
Not if they are disabled or filing for disability.