“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
A denial letter does not close your case. It opens a new one. Whether the insurance company turned down your surgery, cut your wage checks, or a judge handed down a ruling that felt wrong, you have real options. Using them costs you nothing up front.
Yucaipa workers at the Calimesa school district, Stater Bros corporate offices along the I-10 corridor, and the Loma Linda University Medical Center commuter belt have seen claims denied, trimmed, or tied up in delays. You have a right to push back. The law sets clear paths to do it.
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 appears regularly at the San Bernardino WCAB and handles denied-claim appeals for Inland Empire workers. Call (661) 273-1780 for a free review of where your case stands.
Most denied claims in Yucaipa can be appealed. The right path depends on what was denied: a treatment request, a wage check, or a judge's final ruling.
Getting a denial feels like a door slamming shut. But the workers' comp system was built with several appeal routes, because denials happen constantly and many of them are wrong. What matters most is acting quickly. Every appeal path has a short time limit. Missing it can close the door for good.
A few facts are worth knowing right now. Your employer had 90 days to accept or deny your claim. While they decided, up to $10,000 in medical care was owed immediately. If they missed that window, the law treats your injury as accepted. Those are protections the insurer rarely volunteers on its own.
Here is something to hold onto: you filed because you were hurt. The law is on your side. Let us help you use it.
Three different problems, three different fights. Treatment denials go to a doctor review program. Claim denials and bad rulings go to the board and then the courts.
When the insurer runs your treatment request through its internal review and turns it down, you can ask for Independent Medical Review within 30 days. A state-contracted doctor who has no connection to the insurer looks at your records. That doctor either sides with your treating physician or backs the denial. If the reviewer sides with you, the insurer must approve the treatment. The review is meant to be fast, usually within 30 business days.
Labor Code §4610.6(a): "The decision of the independent medical review organization shall be deemed to be the determination of the administrative director and shall be binding on all parties."
That language means the reviewer's call is final in almost every situation. The only narrow exceptions are a financial conflict of interest, bias, or fraud. Outside those specific situations, the review ends the treatment dispute. If you believe one of those exceptions applies, call us right away. Those challenges have strict deadlines too.
If the insurer denied the claim itself, you can file a claim form and take the dispute to a workers' compensation judge. You do not need to wait for the insurer to change its mind. File and let the judge decide who is right. An experienced attorney can push that case toward a hearing faster than most workers realize is possible.
After a hearing, the judge issues a Findings and Award. If that ruling got something wrong, the law gives you a written appeal called a Petition for Reconsideration (a formal written request asking the board to review the judge's decision). Under §5903, you have 25 days from the day the decision was mailed, or 20 days if it was sent electronically. That deadline is hard. The board cannot extend it. Do not wait to see if something changes.
The grounds for a petition are specific. You can argue the judge had no authority to rule as they did, the decision was reached through fraud, the facts on the record do not support the conclusion, you have important new evidence that could not have been found before, or the findings simply do not line up with the order that was issued.
If the board denies your petition, you can still go further. You can file a Writ of Review (a formal request asking the Court of Appeal to look for legal errors). You have 45 days from the board's final decision to file that request. The court does not retry your case. It looks for legal mistakes or solid evidence the board ignored. It is a high bar, but it is a real one.
Treatment appeal: 30 days. Written petition to the board: 25 days by mail, 20 days electronically. Court petition: 45 days. Missing any one of these closes that door permanently.
Every appeal clock starts running the moment you receive the denial or the ruling. Do not assume the other side will fix things on its own. That rarely happens. Below is every key deadline in one clear place.
| What was denied | Your appeal route | Deadline | Law |
|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment denied at Utilization Review | Independent Medical Review | 30 days from the denial | §4610.5 |
| IMR upheld the denial | Appeal only on narrow grounds (fraud, bias, conflict) | 30 days | §4610.6 |
| A judge's decision (Findings and Award) | Petition for Reconsideration | 25 days if mailed, 20 days if served electronically | §5903 |
| Reconsideration denied | Writ of Review to the Court of Appeal | 45 days | §5950 |
| New or worse disability after a closed case | Petition to Reopen | Within 5 years of the injury | §5803 |
Not sure which clock applies to your situation? Call (661) 273-1780. We will tell you exactly where you stand in a free call, with no obligation to move forward.
A written petition goes to the San Bernardino WCAB, then to a seven-member board in San Francisco. If needed, the next step is the California Court of Appeal.
Here is what happens step by step after you decide to challenge a ruling at the San Bernardino WCAB.
First, your lawyer prepares the Petition for Reconsideration. It must be signed under penalty of perjury. It must also be served on every other party the same day it is filed. Missing that service step can result in the petition being rejected right away.
Second, the petition goes to the San Bernardino district office. From there it moves to the seven-member Workers' Compensation Appeals Board in San Francisco for review. The original judge writes a short report. The board then has 60 days to grant, deny, or partially grant the petition.
Third, if the board grants the petition, it has options. It can send the case back for a new hearing. It can change the award amount. It can also issue a new decision right away. If it denies the petition, you have 45 days to file a Writ of Review at the Court of Appeal.
During all of this, your benefits generally keep coming. A pending petition does not automatically stop your wage checks or cut off your medical care. The insurer has to get a separate order from the board to pause payments. That step is unusual when a worker has a strong petition on file. Knowing that can take some of the fear out of the process.
Medical records the judge misread, a skipped evaluator selection step, or an apportionment ruling with no real medical backing are the most common winning grounds.
Most successful petitions come down to one of four things.
A judge must follow what the medical evidence actually shows. If your medical evaluator's report said one thing and the judge relied on a different, thinner opinion, that is a real legal error. The board can correct it. This kind of mistake shows up often in Yucaipa cases. School district workers with repetitive stress, and healthcare commuters whose injuries built up over years of patient lifting, both run into this problem regularly.
Insurers often try to reduce your award by arguing part of your injury comes from age, a prior condition, or wear that was already there before the job made it worse. California law says that argument has to rest on real medical evidence. The doctor making that argument must explain the exact how and why of the split, not just point to an old scan and guess at numbers.
In a 2005 ruling, Escobedo v. Marshalls, the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board sitting en banc (meaning all commissioners deciding together, not just one) confirmed that this kind of apportionment is allowed, but only when the medical report specifically explains how the prior condition contributed to the current disability. A report that simply mentions old wear without that explanation does not clear the legal bar. We press that standard on every Yucaipa petition where apportionment is at issue.
Workers' comp has strict rules about how medical evaluators are chosen. The process works like this: three names go out to both sides, each side strikes one name, and the remaining doctor becomes the evaluator. If the insurer bypassed or violated that process, a report from the wrong doctor may be thrown out entirely. That one fact can flip a whole case. We check the evaluator selection record on every petition we file.
A closed case can sometimes be reopened. If your condition has gotten significantly worse, you may be able to file a Petition to Reopen (a written request asking the board to look at the case again because of new or worsening disability). If a new problem tied to the same work injury has developed, that option may be open to you as well. Either way, that window is available for up to five years from the date of your injury. After that, it closes for good.
While you cannot work, two-thirds of your average weekly wage replaces your paycheck, up to the state weekly cap, for as long as 104 weeks within five years. If you have lasting damage once you have healed as much as you will, the rating on that damage sets how many weeks of permanent disability payments you receive. A wrong rating costs real money over time. An appeal can correct it.
Our firm has recovered up to $5,000,000 for a catastrophic spinal-cord injury and $1,500,000 for a cervical-spine injury. Past results do not guarantee what your case will bring. Call (661) 273-1780 for an honest look at your situation.
Firing you, cutting your hours, or treating you differently because you filed a claim is illegal under California's anti-retaliation law. If it happens, you can win your job back, your lost pay, and a penalty of up to $10,000 added to your award. Tell us right away if your employer's attitude changed after you reported an injury.
Every California employee has the right to file a claim and appeal a denial, regardless of immigration status. If your employer threatens to report your status because you filed or pushed back on a denial, that threat is its own separate violation of California law. Our office is bilingual and handles these situations with care.
Every right described on this page comes from these California Labor Code sections.
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Yucaipa cases are heard at the San Bernardino district office at 464 W. 4th Street. Eman Yazdchi files petitions there regularly for workers across the eastern Inland Empire.
All Yucaipa workers' comp appeals start at the San Bernardino WCAB at 464 W. 4th Street, San Bernardino, CA 92401. The district covers the eastern Inland Empire, including Yucaipa, Redlands, Loma Linda, Colton, Highland, and San Bernardino, as well as cities to the west like Fontana, Ontario, and Chino. A Petition for Reconsideration filed here travels to the seven-member Appeals Board in San Francisco for review. Eman Yazdchi files petitions at this office on a regular basis. He knows its service rhythm, what the panel expects to see in a well-prepared petition, and how quickly electronic service triggers the shorter 20-day deadline.
Yucaipa sits at the eastern edge of the Inland Empire, where the I-10 corridor meets the foothills of the San Bernardino National Forest. The jobs here are varied, and so are the appeal problems they produce.
The strongest petitions point to a specific gap between what the medical evidence showed and what the judge decided. A QME report that was misread by the judge is solid grounds for a petition. So is an apportionment ruling with no real medical explanation behind it. A rating that conflicts with AMA Guidelines is another example. We build every petition around that gap. The specificity of the argument is what moves the board.
Filing a petition does not pause your benefits on its own. Medical care and any disability wage checks that have already been ordered keep flowing unless the insurer gets a separate stay order from the board. That is a rare step when a worker has a well-prepared petition on file. If it does happen, we can move immediately to lift the stay. Nearby facilities for ongoing care include Redlands Community Hospital at 350 Terracina Blvd and Loma Linda University Medical Center on Anderson Street.
Workers' comp attorney fees in California are set by the judge at the end of the case, typically between 12 and 15 percent of what we recover for you. You pay nothing to start. You pay nothing if there is no recovery. A school district aide and a warehouse shift lead get the same quality of representation under that structure, because everyone pays from what we win.
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 California workers and appears regularly at the San Bernardino WCAB. More about Eman Yazdchi. Verify his State Bar profile.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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