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Articles Posted in Unemployment insurance

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Employee Eligible for Unemployment Benefits After Resigning When New Employer Rescinds Job Offer

A recent published decision from the New Jersey’s Appellate Division recognizes that an employee can be entitled to receive unemployment insurance benefits if she resigns from a job to accept a new job but her new employer rescinds her job offer before she begins the new position. Generally, New Jersey’s…

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Court Upholds New Jersey Law Prohibiting Job Ads Requiring Job Applicants Who Are Currently Employed

As I discussed in a previous article, in 2010 New Jersey passed a law Prohibiting Companies From Saying Unemployed Job Candidates Need Not Apply. With limited exceptions, this relatively new anti-discrimination law prohibits employers from advertising that job applicants must have a current job to be eligible to be hired,…

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New York City Prohibits Discrimination Against Unemployed Job Candidates

New York City recently amended its anti-discrimination law, the New York Human Rights Law (NYCHRL), to prohibit discrimination against individuals who are unemployed. The amendment to the NYCHRL prohibits discrimination with respect to both hiring and the terms and conditions of employment on the basis that the job applicant is…

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Employees Forced to Resign May Be Eligible For Unemployment Benefits

In Lord v. Board of Review, New Jersey’s Appellate Division recently held that an employee who resigned because his employer told him he “had to resign” was not disqualified from receiving unemployment benefits. Specifically, Talmage Lord had a job with Crossmark that involved driving to various retail stores in New…

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New Jersey Considers Prohibiting Companies From Saying Unemployed Job Candidates Need Not Apply

New Jersey is considering passing a new law to make it illegal for companies to state in job advertisements that they will not hire job candidates who are currently unemployed. This proposed new law is likely inspired by a recent article in the Huffington Post, which indicates that many companies…

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New Jersey Makes It Harder to Receive Unemployment Benefits

On July 2, 2010, Governor Christopher Christie signed into law an amendment to the New Jersey Unemployment Compensation Act, which makes it more difficult for employees fired for work-related misconduct to receive New Jersey unemployment insurance benefits. Specifically, the amended law creates a new category of disqualification for “severe misconduct.”…

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