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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 at work in Pomona, you may be trying to heal while bills keep coming. That pressure is real. You should not have to guess which form to file or which doctor to trust.
Workers' comp can cover a Pomona injury even when no one did anything wrong. It can cover a forklift hit, a fall, a machine injury, a patient lift, a burn, a car crash on the job, or pain that built up over many shifts. The one-year filing deadline can arrive fast, so early action helps.
Pomona sits where the 10, 71, 57, and 60 corridors feed warehouses, manufacturing, food processing, cold storage, campus work, Fairplex events, hospital jobs, and Downtown Arts Colony service work. Pomona cases are heard at the Pomona WCAB.
You may have a claim when Pomona work caused an accident, repeated strain, exposure, or a condition that worsened.
A warehouse picker on a 10 Freeway corridor shift can file after a back injury. A machinist near Holt Avenue can file after a crush injury. A Fairplex event worker can file after a staging fall. A Cal Poly Pomona custodian can file after a shoulder injury from years of overhead work.
The claim does not depend on proving your employer was careless. It depends on work cause. Did the job place you at the activity, tool, surface, exposure, vehicle, patient, or repeated task that caused harm? If yes, the case deserves review.
Pomona workers may also have language, immigration, or small-employer fears. Those fears should not block care. California protects employees regardless of immigration status. If a supervisor tells you not to file, write it down and keep a copy of every message.
A valid claim can pay medical care, wage checks, permanent disability, mileage, and a retraining voucher when your old job is gone.
Medical care is the first benefit. The insurance company pays for needed treatment tied to the work injury. That can include urgent care, imaging, therapy, surgery, medicine, braces, and mileage to appointments. You should not pay a deductible or copay for approved care.
Labor Code section 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 the injured worker from the effects of his or her injury shall be provided by the employer."
Temporary disability is the wage check while a doctor keeps you off work or gives limits your employer cannot meet. It usually pays two-thirds of your average weekly wage, up to the state cap. It can run for up to 104 weeks within five years. It is not open-ended, so timing matters.
Permanent disability is the money for lasting damage. A doctor rates what did not heal. For injuries since 2013, the rating uses a 1.4 multiplier, then weighs age and job duties. A forklift operator, food-processing worker, campus custodian, or Fairplex event worker may rate differently from a desk worker with the same diagnosis. The rating can move up or down.
You may also qualify for a Supplemental Job Displacement Benefit voucher. That voucher can help pay for retraining if your employer cannot offer regular, modified, or alternate work. In a Pomona claim, that can matter when a worker cannot return to lifting, driving, cooking, nursing, cleaning, or construction.
Value depends on your rating, job duties, age, missed wages, future care, and whether the insurer proves any non-work cause.
Pomona claim value depends on the lasting limits. A short wrist sprain is different from a machine crush injury. A food-processing shoulder claim is different from a campus fall with surgery. The number should come from medical proof, not pressure from the adjuster.
The rating is the center of the money question. A doctor rates lasting impairment. The state formula then weighs your age and occupation. Heavy work, repeated lifting, patient care, construction, kitchen work, and driving can change the final number. The same MRI can mean different values for different jobs.
Insurers often argue apportionment. That means they blame part of your disability on age, an old injury, or a health condition. The doctor must explain the split. A bare guess is not enough. We look for missing facts, weak reasoning, and job duties the report ignored.
| Injury severity | Typical permanent-disability rating | Approximate value range |
|---|---|---|
| Minor strain or sprain, short care | 0 to 10% | $0 to $15,000 |
| Moderate injury needing injections or longer therapy | 10 to 25% | $15,000 to $60,000 |
| Serious injury or single-level surgery | 25 to 45% | $60,000 to $150,000 |
| Severe injury or multi-level surgery | 45 to 70% | $150,000 to $500,000+ |
| Catastrophic spinal-cord injury or TBI | 70% to 100% | $500,000 to seven figures |
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 reported prior California results of $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. Your facts and medical proof control your case.
A denial does not close the case. You can answer it with records, medical proof, witness facts, and a judge request.
After you file the DWC-1 claim form, the insurer has 90 days to accept or deny the claim. During that review period, up to $10,000 in medical care can be owed. That care can matter when pain, swelling, burns, numbness, or lost motion cannot wait.
Some denials say the injury did not happen at work. Others say you reported late, had a prior condition, or were not an employee. In Pomona, denials may focus on whether the injury happened in the warehouse, at the Fairplex event site, on a campus shift, or during travel between job locations. A written report, a clear doctor history, time records, texts, photos, and coworker names can help answer those reasons.
Treatment denials use a different route. Utilization Review checks whether the requested care meets treatment rules. If it turns treatment down, you usually have 30 days to seek Independent Medical Review. That is a medical appeal, not a regular court appeal.
If the whole claim is denied, the case can move to the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board. The goal is to build the file before the conference, not after. Good records make the judge and defense see the real work link.
Report the injury within 30 days when you can. File the claim within one year unless a special rule applies.
The first clock is notice. Tell a supervisor as soon as you can. Use a text, email, incident form, or any written note that names the injury and the date. Do not wait for pain to become unbearable.
The second clock is the claim deadline. Many workers have one year to file. Build-up injuries can be harder because there is no single accident date. The clock usually starts when you have disability and know, or should know, work caused it.
For a food-processing worker, the build-up date may depend on when a doctor connects shoulder, wrist, or back symptoms to line speed and repeated lifting. For a Fairplex fall, the date is usually the event day.
| Step | Time limit | Law |
|---|---|---|
| Tell your employer about the injury | 30 days from the injury | §5400 |
| File the workers' comp claim | Usually 1 year | §5405 |
| Build-up injury clock starts | When disability appears and you know work caused it | §5412 |
| Insurer accepts or denies the claim | 90 days after the claim form is filed | §5402 |
| Appeal denied treatment through IMR | 30 days from the treatment denial | §4610.5 |
| Ask the judge to look again | 20 days electronic, 25 days mailed | §5903 |
If a deadline is close, do not guess. A short review can tell whether the clock started, paused, or has a special fact. Call (661) 273-1780.
These sources support the rights explained above. They are listed so you can check the law for yourself.
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Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California. He is CA Bar #285231. Yazdchi Law has represented hundreds of California workers and appears at the Pomona WCAB.
Pomona work injuries often come from busy, physical jobs. Warehouse and logistics workers face forklifts, docks, pallet jacks, and heavy picks. Manufacturing workers face machines, tools, chemicals, and noise. Food processing and cold storage workers face wet floors, fast lines, repetitive cuts, and cold rooms.
Other Pomona claims look different. Fairplex event crews face setup, staging, heat, crowd movement, and temporary staffing issues. Cal Poly Pomona staff may have custodial, grounds, lab, dining, or maintenance injuries. Pomona Valley hospital and medical workers face patient lifting, violence, needle sticks, and long standing shifts.
Our fee is not paid up front. The workers' comp judge approves the attorney fee, often 12 to 15 percent of the recovery. For a Pomona injury review, call (661) 273-1780.
No. Attorney fees in California workers' comp are usually paid from the recovery and approved by the judge. Many fees are around 12 to 15 percent.
An employer cannot lawfully punish you for reporting a work injury or filing a claim. Save texts, schedules, write-ups, and names of witnesses if the employer reacts badly.
Yes. California workers' comp applies regardless of immigration status. Medical care, wage checks, permanent disability, and interpreter rights may still apply.
Most workers start in the employer medical network. Some workers can predesignate a doctor before injury. If treatment is delayed or poor, we review the medical options.
A claim can take months or longer. It depends on healing, work restrictions, denied care, surgery, medical-legal exams, and whether the insurer disputes the rating.
Temporary and event workers can still be covered. The key is identifying the actual employer, staffing company, or payroll company, then filing the claim with the right insurer.
Temporary disability usually pays two-thirds of average weekly wages, up to the state cap, when a doctor takes you off work or gives limits the employer cannot meet.
Pomona claims are heard at the Pomona WCAB. Local venue helps when the workplace, witnesses, doctors, and board process are tied to the same area.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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