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✦ 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 Moorpark, you have real rights. You do not have to face the insurance company alone.
You may work at Moorpark College on Campus Park Drive. You may be part of the Bank of America operations team on Princeton Avenue. You may run framing on a residential phase along the 23 corridor, or pick avocados near the Arroyo Simi. No matter where you work in Moorpark, California law protects you.
You may be entitled to your medical care paid in full. You may also receive two-thirds of your wages while you cannot work. A cash award for lasting damage may also be available. You have one year from the date of injury to file. Every week you wait makes the case harder to build.
Do these three things today:
Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California (CA Bar #285231). He handles Moorpark claims at the Oxnard WCAB. Call (661) 273-1780 for a free review.
If your job in Moorpark caused or contributed to your injury, you likely have a valid claim. That is true even if no single accident happened and the damage built up over time.
California workers' comp is a no-fault system. You do not have to prove your employer did anything wrong. You only have to show a connection between your job and your injury.
Two kinds of injury are covered. A specific injury happens on one day: a slip in a College dining hall, a fall from scaffolding on a new residential build off Ridgecrest Avenue, or a hand caught in machinery on the 118 construction belt. A cumulative injury builds up slowly. A Bank of America call-center agent who develops carpal tunnel from years of keyboard work has a cumulative-trauma claim. So does a College facilities worker whose back breaks down from years of lifting and climbing.
Both kinds are covered by California law. And every worker in the state is covered. An undocumented worker on a High Street restaurant crew, a day laborer hired off New Los Angeles Avenue, and a full-time College employee all have the same right to file. Immigration status does not block a claim.
Full medical care at no cost to you, two-thirds of your wages while you cannot work, a disability award for lasting damage, mileage reimbursement, and a retraining voucher if you cannot return to your old job.
Here is what California law provides:
No honest lawyer can name a number without reviewing your case. Value turns on the lasting damage, your age, how physical your job is, and what future care you will need.
After your condition stabilizes, a doctor rates the lasting damage as a percentage using the AMA Guides. For injuries since 2013, the formula applies a 1.4 multiplier, then adjusts based on your age and occupation. A tract-construction framer and a Bank of America data processor with the same MRI may end up with different ratings. Their jobs place very different demands on the body.
The percentage then determines how many weeks of payments you receive. The table below shows general California ranges by injury type.
| Injury severity | Typical permanent-disability rating | Approximate value range |
|---|---|---|
| Minor strain or sprain, fully resolved | 1% to 10% | $3,000 to $15,000 |
| Moderate injury requiring surgery | 11% to 25% | $20,000 to $60,000 |
| Serious injury or single-level spinal fusion | 26% to 40% | $60,000 to $125,000 |
| Severe or multi-level spine injury | 41% to 70% | $125,000 to $300,000 |
| Catastrophic spinal cord or brain injury | 71% to 100% | $300,000 and above |
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.
Our firm has recovered $5,000,000 for a catastrophic spinal-cord injury and $1,500,000 for a cervical-spine injury. Those results reflect specific facts and do not promise the outcome of your case. Call (661) 273-1780 for an honest, no-cost review of your situation.
A denial is not the end. You still get up to $10,000 in interim medical care while the insurer decides. You have a clear path to fight back at every stage.
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 the injury is covered. During those 90 days, up to $10,000 in medical care is owed right away. They cannot freeze your treatment while they investigate.
If they deny a specific treatment, you can challenge that through the Utilization Review process and then through Independent Medical Review within 30 days. An independent doctor reviews your records against state treatment guidelines. The insurer must follow that determination.
If your employer fires you, cuts your hours, or punishes you after you file, that is illegal retaliation. You may win your job back, recover your lost wages, and receive a penalty up to $10,000 added to your award.
If the dispute is not resolved, you can file a Petition for Reconsideration. After that, a Writ of Review is available. And if your condition gets worse later, you may reopen the case within five years of your date of injury.
California Labor Code §4600: "Medical, surgical, chiropractic, acupuncture, and hospital treatment, including nursing, medicines, medical and surgical supplies, crutches, and apparatus, including orthotic and prosthetic devices and optical and podiatry appliances, as needed to cure or relieve from the effects of the injury shall be provided by the employer."
Report the injury to your employer 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 job.
These two clocks run at the same time. Missing either one gives the insurer an opening to reject your claim. The table below is your reference.
| What you must do | Deadline | Law |
|---|---|---|
| Tell your employer in writing | 30 days from injury | §5400 |
| File your formal claim | 1 year from injury | §5405 |
| Cumulative-injury clock starts | When a doctor ties the condition to your job | §5412 |
| Insurer must accept or deny | 90 days after you file | §5402 |
| Appeal a denied treatment | 30 days from the denial | §4610.5 |
Not sure where your deadline stands? Call (661) 273-1780 and we will check it for free.
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Eman Yazdchi is one of fewer than 1% of California attorneys who hold the Certified Specialist credential in workers' comp law. He appears regularly at the Oxnard WCAB on Moorpark cases.
Eman Yazdchi holds the Certified Specialist designation in Workers' Compensation Law from the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California (CA Bar #285231). He has represented hundreds of injured California workers. He appears regularly at the Oxnard WCAB district office on Moorpark claims of every type: Moorpark College cumulative-trauma files, Bank of America carpal-tunnel and repetitive-strain cases, ladder-fall injuries from avocado groves near the Arroyo Simi, and nail-gun and fall injuries on the 23 and 118 corridor tract builds. Yazdchi Law's office is at 1125 W Avenue M-14, Palmdale. Learn more about Eman Yazdchi. Verify his State Bar profile.
Workers' comp claims for Moorpark workers are heard at the Oxnard district office of the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board at 1901 Outlet Center Drive, Oxnard 93036. It is the only WCAB district in Ventura County. From Moorpark, the drive is about 20 miles west on the 118 and then the 101. Yazdchi Law appears there on Moorpark files of all types. Related: Oxnard workers' comp claims and the California workers' comp practice overview.
For a serious work injury, call 911 first. The closest acute-care campus is Adventist Health Simi Valley at 2975 N. Sycamore Drive in Simi Valley. Los Robles Regional Medical Center at 215 W. Janss Road in Thousand Oaks handles more complex trauma. St. John's Pleasant Valley Hospital in Camarillo and Ventura County Medical Center in Ventura are additional options for escalated care.
Nothing up front, and nothing unless we recover for you. Workers' comp attorney fees in California are set by the WCAB judge, typically 12 to 15 percent of your award or settlement. If there is no recovery, you owe nothing. The fee comes out of the final settlement, not from your medical care or temporary disability checks during treatment.
Related Moorpark coverage: settlement, denied claim, appeal, and retaliation.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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