“Eman at Yazdchi Law was extremely professional, responsive, and supportive at all times. He and his staff exceeded all of my expectations.”
Andrea Dalessandro
✦ 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
If you were hurt on the job in Brea, you have rights. You do not have to face the insurance company alone.
Work injuries in Brea look different from job to job. A stockroom slip at the Brea Mall on State College Boulevard. A forklift strike in a Lambert Road warehouse. A fall from scaffolding on a downtown Brea revitalization project. Or years of lifting, scanning, and packing that slowly wore your back or wrists to the point of surgery. Every one of those injuries can qualify for benefits. Your employer's fault does not matter.
Here is what you may be entitled to receive: your medical care paid in full with no copays, two-thirds of your wages while you cannot work, a cash award if the damage is lasting, and a retraining voucher if you cannot go back to your old job. You have one year to file. Starting right now costs you nothing.
Three steps to protect yourself today:
Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California (CA Bar #285231). He handles Brea workplace injury claims at the Long Beach WCAB and has represented hundreds of injured California workers.
If you were hurt doing your job in Brea, you very likely qualify. California covers sudden accidents and injuries that build up slowly over months or years of hard work.
Most hurt workers ask the same thing: do I really have a case? If you were hurt while doing your job, you very likely do. You do not need to prove your employer was careless. You only need to show the injury happened at work, or that the work itself caused it over time.
A Brea Mall food-court cook burned on a grill has a case. A Curtis Theatre stagehand who falls from a catwalk has a case. A BREA Bowling Center mechanic whose shoulder wears out from years of servicing pinsetter machines has a case. A Brea Olinda School District custodian who slips on a wet floor has a case. The law covers all of them the same way.
California also covers every worker regardless of immigration status. Undocumented workers at Brea's warehouses along the Imperial Highway corridor have the same right to benefits as any payroll employee. A threat to report your immigration status for filing a claim is its own violation of California law.
California workers' comp pays your medical bills with no copays, replaces two-thirds of your wages while you heal, and adds a cash award for lasting damage. A retraining voucher is available if you cannot go back to your old job.
Medical care. The medical-treatment right requires the insurer to pay for everything you need from the date of injury: doctor visits, imaging, surgery, physical therapy, prescriptions, and specialist referrals. You pay no copays and no deductibles.
Temporary disability. While you cannot work, you receive two-thirds of your average weekly wage. Payments can run for up to 104 weeks within a five-year window. A state weekly cap applies, but for most Brea warehouse workers, retail employees, and construction crew members, these checks keep a household running during recovery.
Permanent disability. Once your doctor says you have healed as much as you will, a rating is assigned. That rating becomes weekly payments or a lump-sum settlement. The calculation weighs the extent of your injury, your age, and how physically demanding your job is. A Lambert Road forklift operator and a Brea Mall sales associate with the same diagnosis carry different rating adjustments because the physical demand of the work differs.
Mileage. Every trip to a medical appointment is reimbursed at the state mileage rate.
Retraining voucher. If your employer cannot return you to your regular duties, you may receive a Supplemental Job Displacement Benefit voucher worth up to $6,000. That money pays for courses, certification programs, or tools at an approved school.
Claim value depends on your lasting damage, your age, your occupation, and future medical care. No honest attorney quotes a number without reviewing the medical record.
The table below shows where California claims generally land by injury severity. These are reference ranges, not a prediction for your case.
| Injury severity | Typical permanent-disability rating | Approximate value range |
|---|---|---|
| Minor strain or sprain, no surgery | 1% to 8% | $3,000 to $12,000 |
| Moderate injury, surgery avoided | 8% to 20% | $12,000 to $40,000 |
| Serious injury or single-level fusion | 20% to 45% | $40,000 to $120,000 |
| Severe or multi-level injury | 45% to 70% | $120,000 to $300,000 |
| Catastrophic: spinal cord or TBI | 70% to 100% | Life pension plus future medical |
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.
Yazdchi Law has recovered $5,000,000 for a catastrophic spinal-cord injury and $1,500,000 for a cervical-spine injury. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. For a free review of your Brea claim, call (661) 273-1780.
Here is how the rating becomes money. After you reach maximum medical improvement, a doctor scores your lasting damage as a percentage using the AMA Guides, Fifth Edition. For injuries since 2013, the law applies a 1.4 multiplier and then adjusts for your age and your occupation. The harder the physical demands of your job, the higher the adjustment can go. That final percentage sets how many weeks of payments you receive.
Insurers routinely argue that part of your injury came from age or a prior condition, not from your Brea job. By law, their doctor has to explain exactly how and why any such split applies. A vague reference to your age or an old MRI is not enough. A 2005 California Workers' Compensation Appeals Board ruling confirmed that standard, and Yazdchi Law uses it to fight back against weak apportionment on every claim.
A denial is not the end. You still receive up to $10,000 in medical care while the claim is open, and you have a clear appeal path if they refuse treatment.
After you file the DWC-1 form, the insurer has 90 days to accept or deny your claim. If they miss that window, the law presumes your injury is covered. During those 90 days, up to $10,000 in medical treatment is owed right away. They cannot freeze your care while they investigate.
If they refuse a treatment your doctor ordered, you can appeal through Independent Medical Review within 30 days of the denial. A neutral doctor reviews your records against California treatment guidelines and either upholds or overturns the insurer's call. If the claim still does not resolve, a hearing at the Long Beach WCAB is the next step.
If a WCAB decision goes against you, you can file a Petition for Reconsideration within 25 days of a mailed decision, or 20 days if it was served electronically. A Writ of Review in the Court of Appeal is available within 45 days after that. And if your condition gets worse after the case closes, you may reopen within five years of the date of injury.
If your employer fires you, cuts your hours, or treats you badly because you filed a claim, that is illegal retaliation. The penalty includes getting your job back, your lost wages, and an extra 50 percent added to your award up to $10,000. For Brea's many warehouse and back-of-house workers, immigration threats from an employer are also their own separate violation under California law.
Report the injury within 30 days. File your formal claim within one year. For a build-up injury, the one-year clock starts when a doctor first ties your condition to your work.
Two clocks matter. Miss the first and the insurer gains a foothold. Miss the second and the claim may be barred entirely.
| What you must do | Deadline | Rule |
|---|---|---|
| Tell your employer in writing | 30 days from injury | §5400 |
| File your formal claim | 1 year from injury | §5405 |
| Build-up injury clock starts | When you feel it and know work caused it | §5412 |
| Insurer must accept or deny | 90 days from filing | §5402 |
| Appeal a denied treatment | 30 days from the denial | §4610.5 |
Build-up injuries are common in Brea. Brea Mall associates whose wrists broke down from years of scanning and stocking, Imperial Highway warehouse workers whose backs gave out from a decade of pallet handling, and BREA Bowling Center mechanics whose shoulders wore from years of overhead work all have valid build-up claims. For them, the one-year filing clock starts on the day a doctor first connects the condition to the job, not the first day the pain began.
Not sure where your clock stands? A free call can sort it out: (661) 273-1780.
Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist who appears regularly at the Long Beach WCAB and has represented hundreds of injured California workers at no upfront cost to them.
Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California (CA Bar #285231). Fewer than 1% of California attorneys hold this credential. He has represented hundreds of injured California workers and appears regularly at the Long Beach WCAB, the district that handles Brea cases.
You pay nothing to start. Attorney fees in California workers' comp are set by the WCAB judge, typically 12 to 15 percent of the settlement or award. If there is no recovery, you owe no fee. A Brea Mall stockroom worker, a Lambert Road warehouse lead, and a downtown Brea construction laborer all get the same quality of representation with zero out-of-pocket cost to begin. Verify Eman Yazdchi's State Bar profile here.
Labor Code §4600: "Medical, surgical, chiropractic, acupuncture, and hospital treatment, including nursing, medicines, medical and surgical supplies, crutches, and apparatuses, including orthotic and prosthetic devices and services, that is reasonably required to cure or relieve from the effects of the injury shall be provided by the employer."
This means the insurer owes you every treatment your doctor orders from the moment you are hurt. You pay nothing toward it.
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Brea cases are heard at the Long Beach WCAB. For emergency care, Providence St. Jude Medical Center in Fullerton and UCI Health in Orange are the nearest acute options.
Brea workers' compensation cases are heard at the Long Beach district office of the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board. Eman Yazdchi appears there regularly on claims from north Orange County workers, including Brea Mall retail and food-court workers, Lambert Road warehouse crews, and downtown Brea construction laborers. Related north-OC coverage: Fullerton workers' comp and La Habra Heights workers' comp.
Brea's workforce spans retail, light industry, hospitality, schools, and residential construction. These are the areas that drive the most claims:
For a serious work injury in Brea, call 911. The nearest acute-care emergency departments are Providence St. Jude Medical Center on West La Veta Avenue in Fullerton and Kaiser Permanente Anaheim Medical Center on Lakeview Avenue. UCI Health Medical Center in Orange is the regional Level I trauma center for the most serious cases. Cal/OSHA must be notified within eight hours of any work-related death, hospitalization, amputation, or loss of an eye.
Yazdchi Law has represented hundreds of California workers, including clients from Brea and surrounding north Orange County. Firm-wide, the practice has recovered $5,000,000 for a catastrophic spinal-cord injury and $1,500,000 for a cervical-spine injury. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Each case turns on its specific medical evidence, disability rating, apportionment findings, and credibility determinations at the Long Beach WCAB.
Related Brea workers' comp coverage: settlement, denied claim, appeal, and retaliation.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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