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The most important thing is filing as soon as possible after termination. Your benefit year starts from when you file, not when you were fired, so any delay just costs you money.
Good luck with everything! Remember that even if the process is frustrating, you have rights as a worker and shouldn't be afraid to advocate for yourself.
Age discrimination is real too. Older workers often have a harder time finding new jobs even when they're qualified. Until that changes, you'll always have some long-term unemployed people regardless of how many jobs are available.
Have you tried reaching out to Washington ESD about their reemployment services? Sometimes they have programs specifically for older workers.
Good luck getting through to them to ask about it. I've been trying for weeks. Might try that Claimyr service someone mentioned earlier.
Bottom line is that 0% unemployment would require perfect information, perfect mobility, perfect skills matching, and perfect timing - none of which exist in the real world. The goal should be minimizing unnecessary unemployment while accepting that some level is inevitable in a dynamic economy.
Bottom line: it's about total wages earned, not length at one job. File if you think you might qualify - Washington ESD will make the final determination based on your actual wage records.
Dylan Campbell
UPDATE: Just wanted to thank everyone for the advice. I ended up using Claimyr to get through to Washington ESD and they were actually really helpful. Set up a $40/month payment plan and they waived the interest. Still not dischargeable in bankruptcy but at least it's manageable now.
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Dylan Campbell
•Sorry, no - I'm someone else who found this thread while searching for the same info. Figured I'd share my experience since it might help others.
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Ethan Clark
•Glad to hear Claimyr worked out for you! That's exactly the kind of result OP needs - actually getting through to discuss options.
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Sofia Torres
Final thought - even though unemployment overpayments usually survive bankruptcy, Chapter 13 bankruptcy might still help you by consolidating all debts into one manageable payment plan. Worth discussing with an attorney.
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Nia Wilson
•I'll definitely look into that. At this point I need to explore every option.
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Sofia Torres
•Good luck with whatever you decide. The important thing is taking action rather than ignoring the debt and hoping it goes away.
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