“I am glad and so very pleased...he made happen what no other attorney could do. So far he has proven his weight in gold.”
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Antelope Valley
✦ 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
Many Montebello workers keep going after an injury because the household depends on each check. Then the claim is filed, and the pressure starts. A supervisor may say the company does not want claims. HR may stop giving shifts. A manager may tell a worker on restrictions that there is no work anymore.
California workers' comp retaliation law is meant for that kind of pressure. It protects workers who file a claim or tell the employer they plan to file. The law applies to a warehouse worker near Washington Boulevard, a nurse or aide near Beverly Hospital, a retail worker on Whittier Boulevard, or a driver moving between Telegraph Road and the 5.
Montebello retaliation petitions are heard at the Los Angeles WCAB. Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California. Yazdchi Law reviews the injury case, the timing, and the employer's explanation. The number is (661) 273-1780.
No. Your employer cannot fire or threaten you because you filed a claim or said you would file one.
The law does not stop every firing. It stops a firing done because of the workers' comp claim. The difference is proof. A Montebello worker may need to show that the employer knew about the claim, then acted against the worker because of it.
Think about a packer in a Washington Boulevard warehouse. She reports a shoulder injury and asks for a claim form. Two days later, the lead says people who file claims do not last. The next schedule leaves her off. That is the kind of timeline that should be saved and reviewed.
Labor Code section 132a says an employer may not discharge, threaten to discharge, or discriminate against a worker because the worker filed or made known an intention to file a workers' compensation claim.
A threat can matter even before the firing. If the boss says the worker will be replaced for filing, that statement may support the petition. Save the date, the words, and the names of anyone who heard it.
Retaliation includes job loss, threats, demotion, fewer hours, worse assignments, refused light duty, and discipline tied to the claim.
Montebello retaliation can happen in many forms. A nursing assistant may be moved from a steady shift to call-in work after reporting a patient transfer injury. A grocery worker may lose hours after the doctor gives lifting limits. A driver may be written up for appointments that the employer knew were for the work injury.
The employer's label is not the end of the story. Calling something a layoff, attendance issue, or policy matter does not decide the case. The facts decide it. The pattern before and after the injury often tells the real story.
The WCAB can award reinstatement, lost wages, and a 50 percent compensation increase capped at $10,000.
The retaliation petition is part of the workers' comp system. It does not replace the injury claim. It adds a claim that the employer punished the worker for using that system. When proven, the judge can order remedies that address the job harm.
| Remedy | How it works |
|---|---|
| Reinstatement | The worker may be returned to the job when the judge finds that remedy fits. |
| Lost wages | The petition can seek pay lost because of the firing, demotion, or hour cut. |
| 50 percent increase | Compensation may be increased by 50 percent, with a $10,000 cap. |
| Medical and disability benefits | The underlying workers' comp benefits remain part of the injury case. |
No lawyer should promise a result. The remedy depends on the records, witnesses, wage loss, and what the judge finds after hearing the evidence.
You usually have one year from the retaliatory act to file the petition at the WCAB.
The deadline is short. It is not counted from when the worker feels ready. It is counted from the bad act. That may be the day of the firing, the day the demotion started, or the day hours were cut because of the claim.
For Montebello workers, the Los Angeles WCAB venue does not change the clock. A worker can still be treating, waiting on a doctor, or trying to return to work. The retaliation deadline still needs attention.
Useful proof includes timing, claim forms, texts, schedules, payroll records, medical restrictions, and witnesses who heard threats.
A strong file is built from small pieces. Keep the DWC-1 claim form. Keep screenshots of messages. Save the old schedule and the new schedule. Note each time a supervisor mentions the claim, the injury, medical visits, or insurance cost.
Montebello workers may have proof tied to shift work. A hospital employee may have badge logs. A warehouse worker may have production records. A retail worker may have posted schedules. A delivery worker may have route changes after the injury report. Those records can help connect the punishment to the claim.
An employer cannot use immigration fear to stop an injured Montebello worker from asserting workplace rights.
California law protects workers regardless of immigration status in this setting. Labor Code sections 1171.5 and 244 help block immigration threats used to silence workers. A manager should not threaten a worker, a spouse, or a family member because a workers' comp claim was filed.
This can matter in restaurants, garment work, warehouses, cleaning crews, elder care, and small shops across Montebello. A threat may be spoken in Spanish or another language. It may be said off the clock. It still belongs in the case review.
Eman Yazdchi, CA Bar #285231, is the attorney at Yazdchi Law. The firm can review a Montebello workers' comp retaliation matter and explain the next step in plain language.
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Montebello workers' comp retaliation petitions are filed at the Los Angeles WCAB. Local work often centers around Whittier Boulevard retail, Beverly Boulevard medical jobs, Washington Boulevard manufacturing, Telegraph Road warehouses, and delivery routes that cross the 5, 60, and 710. These details are not background noise. They can explain how a worker's hours, duties, or routes changed after the claim.
A Montebello worker should gather anything that shows the before and after. That may include shift bids, route sheets, time cards, payroll stubs, doctor work status notes, texts with dispatch, or a supervisor's written comments. If the employer claims poor performance, old reviews can be important.
Health care workers may have a different proof trail than warehouse workers. A nurse, aide, janitor, or dietary worker may have badge swipes, unit schedules, patient lift notes, or staffing messages. A warehouse employee may have pick rates, dock assignments, scanner logs, or forklift duty changes. A driver may have route sheets that show fewer stops after the injury report.
Montebello also has many family-run shops and restaurants. In those workplaces, the proof may be less formal. A worker may need screenshots, photos of posted schedules, names of relatives who gave orders, and notes about what was said in Spanish or another language. Short notes can matter when they are made close in time.
Some workers are told to use sick time instead of workers' comp. Others are told to come back without restrictions or not come back at all. Those statements should be saved. A doctor note that says modified work is allowed can be important when the employer claims no work existed.
The commute pattern can also matter. A worker who drives from Montebello to a job in Commerce, Pico Rivera, or Vernon may have toll, gas, parking, or route records that match the work schedule. If the employer cuts a route or moves the worker to a far site after the claim, those details can show real harm. A short calendar can help connect each change to the claim date.
Do not assume a verbal warning is too small to save. A warning may be the first step before a firing. It can show that the employer started building a file after the injury. Keep the warning, any response you gave, and any proof that the same rule was not used against other workers.
Yazdchi Law reviews the timeline before deciding what to file. The review looks at the injury notice, the claim, the employer's knowledge, the bad act, and the deadline. Call (661) 273-1780 for a Montebello retaliation review.
It can be retaliation if the hour cut happened because of the claim. Save the old and new schedules, payroll records, and any messages about why the change happened.
A threat to discharge or punish a worker for filing can matter. Write down the words used, the date, who said them, and who heard them.
Montebello workers' comp retaliation petitions are handled at the Los Angeles WCAB. The petition is usually filed in connection with the injury claim.
The deadline is one year from the retaliatory act. The act may be a firing, demotion, threat, hour cut, bad shift transfer, or refusal of light duty.
Yes. The medical part of the workers' comp case is separate from the retaliation remedy. The retaliation petition does not replace the injury claim.
Tell the lawyer right away. Labor Code sections 1171.5 and 244 protect workers when immigration threats are used to interfere with workplace rights.
Bring claim forms, medical work status notes, schedules, write-ups, payroll stubs, texts, emails, and names of witnesses. A short timeline also helps.
Call Yazdchi Law at (661) 273-1780. Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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