Submitted by Deacon_Blues1 t3_10i6oyy in Pennsylvania
sandmanrdv t1_j5d7g0f wrote
Severance determination needs to done by an Examiner. Sounds like your severance may have exceeded the threshold where it can delay receipt of benefits. For a claim filed in 2022 that would have been around $22k.
You said you filed on 12/17. What was you actual last day of work? UC’s weeks are a calendar week. If your last day was 12/16 and you applied 12/17 then your application date is Sunday of that week or 12/11. You were disqualified that week because you worked full time.
Week ending 12/24 would be your unpaid waiting week, but not if your severance was over the threshold.
https://www.uc.pa.gov/faq/claimant/Pages/Severance-Pension-Pay-Deductions-FAQS.aspx
Deacon_Blues1 OP t1_j5d8kjr wrote
That makes sense my severance was high. It was over $22K. Last day was 12/17, that week I received the severance and claimed it on unemployment. Since then though I have been unable to claim. I have paid into it for years, I feel as though I should be able to claim minus my part time job, but it is not the end of the world. I have just never been in this situation. Thanks for your help, you cleared somethings up.
sandmanrdv t1_j5d9umc wrote
Severance delay is a math formula. That link explains how it works. You need your gross severance and your normal weekly gross wage. Let’s say your severance was $40k. First thing is subtract the threshold amount for that year so $40k-$22k = $18k. The $18k is the deductible severance value. You divide that by your normal weekly gross, let’s say $2k. $18k/$2k= 9 week severance delay. In the example that claimant would not be eligible for benefits during the first 9 weeks they were unemployed, the 10th week would be the unpaid waiting week, the 11th week would be the first payable week.
Deacon_Blues1 OP t1_j5da10b wrote
Thank you for breaking it down. I’m not eligible then, makes sense now.
Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments