“Eman really knows his stuff and we were very pleased with our end result.”
Myretta & Thomas Knorr
✦ Certified Specialist in Workers’ Compensation Law, certified by the State Bar of California, Board of Legal Specialization ✦
By Eman Yazdchi, Esq. · Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization · Cal Bar #285231
A serious work injury can hit a family budget like a storm, and the fear that comes with it is real. Who covers the doctor. How the rent gets paid. Whether the job will still be there. If those questions weigh on you in Bloomington, know that the law has your back, and the first step is a free call.
Here is the part that steadies most workers. When your job causes an injury, benefits are usually owed to you, even if the accident was partly your fault. California built a no-fault system for this reason. It can pay your full medical care, replace two-thirds of your wages while you are out, and add a cash award when the harm lasts. You generally have one year to file, so do not delay.
Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California. He represents Bloomington workers at the San Bernardino WCAB, in Spanish and English. Your first call is free.
Take these three steps today:
If your Bloomington job caused the injury, a claim is very likely yours. It can cover treatment, replace part of your lost pay, and pay for any permanent damage.
The first thing most hurt workers wonder is whether they even have a case. When the injury came from doing your job, you almost always do. A single accident counts, such as a fall from a loading dock off the I-10. So does slow wear, such as a warehouse picker's back or a truck loader's shoulder after years of the same lifting.
The test is simple to state. Did the injury arise out of and in the course of your employment? Put plainly, did work cause it, and were you working when it struck? A logistics worker hurt at a Bloomington distribution center qualifies. So does a driver injured at the I-10 and I-215 interchange. So does a recycling-yard worker whose hands wear down over time.
The law recognizes two injury types. A specific injury lands in one moment, like a forklift accident or a dropped load. A cumulative injury builds across months or years of the same strain. Each one is covered. With a slow-building injury, your filing clock does not start until you realize the damage came from your work.
This trade sits at the core of the system. You skip the burden of proving employer fault. In return, you cannot sue your employer in civil court. What you receive instead is a fixed set of benefits that arrive sooner than a lawsuit ever would.
California Labor Code section 3600(a): "Liability for the compensation provided by this division ... shall, without regard to negligence, exist against an employer for any injury sustained by his or her employees arising out of and in the course of the employment."
Every Bloomington worker is covered, including those without papers. A cash-paid yard worker and a temp-agency loader share the same right to file. Immigration status cannot bar a claim, and no employer may use it as a threat.
Expect paid treatment, two-thirds of your wages while you recover, a payout for permanent damage, and help with travel costs and retraining.
Picture a claim as a bundle, not one check. Several benefits run side by side while you heal. Here is what a Bloomington claim can deliver.
From the first day, the insurer must cover every reasonable treatment your recovery requires. Visits, surgery, rehab, imaging, and prescriptions are all part of it. No copay, no deductible. When a warehouse worker needs back surgery, that cost lands on the insurer.
If the injury stops you from working, temporary disability covers two-thirds of your usual weekly pay, up to a state cap. That support can run as long as 104 weeks within five years. A loader sidelined by a back injury keeps a check coming through the hardest stretch.
Not every injury fully heals. When you reach the point where you will not improve, a doctor assigns a percentage to the permanent damage. That figure drives your disability award. How the percentage turns into dollars is the next section.
Major injuries can demand care for years. If your doctor confirms you will need ongoing treatment later, your claim can hold that care open for as long as the injury affects you.
The insurer must also reimburse mileage to your appointments. And when your old job is no longer possible, a retraining voucher of up to $6,000 helps you build new skills.
The value depends on how serious the lasting damage is, your age, your job's demands, and the care you will still need. Every claim is its own story.
Be wary of anyone who names a figure before reviewing your file. Honestly, it varies. Four things drive the number: the degree of permanent damage, your age, the physical demand of your job, and your future treatment.
Here is the path from injury to dollars. After you heal as far as you can, a doctor measures the lasting damage with the state's rating guides. For injuries from 2013 on, that score is multiplied, then weighed up or down for your age and the strain of your trade. The chart gives broad statewide figures, not a forecast for your claim.
| Injury severity | Typical permanent disability | Approximate value range |
|---|---|---|
| Minor strain or sprain, full recovery | 0 to 5 percent | $2,000 to $12,000 |
| Moderate injury needing surgery | 10 to 25 percent | $15,000 to $55,000 |
| Serious injury or a single-level fusion | 30 to 50 percent | $60,000 to $150,000 |
| Severe or multi-level injury | 55 to 80 percent | $160,000 to $370,000 |
| Catastrophic, spinal cord or brain | 85 to 100 percent | $400,000 and up, plus lifetime care |
These are general California ranges, not a prediction. Your actual award depends on your disability rating, age, occupation, and future medical care. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
A denial is only a setback. You have 30 days to appeal a refused treatment, and roughly 20 to 25 days to challenge a judge's decision in writing.
Claims get denied for all kinds of reasons, some fair and many not. Hold onto this: a denial is not a dead end. The law builds in real ways to fight back, and the sooner you start, the better.
After you file, the insurer gets 90 days to accept or deny. During that wait, they remain responsible for up to $10,000 of your care. When they reject a treatment your doctor ordered, you can request an independent medical review within 30 days. When a judge rules against you, a written petition asks the appeals board to reconsider, usually due within 25 days of a mailed ruling.
You will not face any of this alone. We study the denial, find its weak point, and assemble the medical evidence to turn it around.
Tell your employer within 30 days and file the claim within one year. A missed deadline can wipe out your benefits, so move fast.
Strict clocks govern California workers' comp. They are firm rules, not friendly hints, and blowing one can sink a claim. For each client, we mark every date on day one. The table lists the key ones.
| Step | Deadline |
|---|---|
| Notify your employer of the injury | 30 days from the injury |
| File the formal claim (DWC-1) | 1 year from the injury |
| Slow-building injury over time | 1 year from when you knew it was work related |
| Insurer must accept or deny | 90 days after you file |
You get a Certified Specialist who knows the San Bernardino WCAB and serves the I-10 corridor in Spanish and English, with respect.
Eman Yazdchi carries the Certified Specialist credential in Workers' Compensation Law from the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California. That mark sets a small group of lawyers apart. He has stood up for hundreds of California workers and is a regular at the San Bernardino WCAB, the office that hears Bloomington claims.
There is no charge to begin. Your fee is a modest share of the award, fixed by the judge, commonly 12 to 15 percent. No recovery means no fee. Our team serves you in English and Spanish and explains each stage in plain language.
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Bloomington is a working community wedged into the I-10 and I-215 corridor of San Bernardino County, surrounded by the warehouses and freight yards that move goods across the Inland Empire. The local injuries reflect that. Warehouse and logistics workers strain backs and shoulders lifting and loading. Truck drivers face road trauma and long-haul wear. Recycling and salvage yards add cuts, crush injuries, and repetitive damage. Much of this work is hard on the body and runs long hours.
Your case would be heard at the San Bernardino district office of the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board, at 464 West 4th Street, just east of the I-10 and I-215 interchange. That office covers Bloomington, Fontana, Rialto, Colton, San Bernardino, and the rest of the central county. Hearings, settlement conferences, and trials all run on its calendar. A Spanish interpreter is available, and Yazdchi Law appears there regularly.
Many Bloomington households run on a single warehouse paycheck, which makes a work injury frightening. You should not have to choose between your health and your job. Call (661) 273-1780 for a free review in Spanish or English.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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