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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
A Boyle Heights worker has 20 days to file a Petition for Reconsideration and 25 more days to take a Writ of Review. Manufacturing, food-processing, and I-5/I-10 interchange warehouse files are heard at the Los Angeles district WCAB. Certified Specialist Eman Yazdchi (California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California) prepares the Petition and the writ.
Three statutory stages: a Petition for Reconsideration to the Appeals Board within 20 days, then a Writ of Review to the California Court of Appeal within 25 days.
A Boyle Heights workers' compensation appeal moves an adverse order issued by a Workers' Compensation Administrative Law Judge at the Los Angeles WCAB at 320 W 4th Street up to the seven-member Appeals Board panel through a Petition for Reconsideration under California Labor Code §5903 — and, if necessary, further to the California Court of Appeal through a writ of review under California Labor Code §5950. The deadlines are short and unforgiving: 25 days from service of the WCJ's order by mail, 20 days if served electronically. Missing the California Labor Code §5903 clock ends the appeal at the WCAB level; missing the California Labor Code §5950 45-day writ clock ends judicial review.
The Boyle Heights appellate caseload at the Los Angeles WCAB tracks the same injury verticals as the trial-level work: LAC+USC Medical Center clinical and support staff, Cesar Chavez Avenue restaurant and retail workers, Sixth Street warehouse and food-processing workers, and the heavily Spanish-speaking residential-services workforce. The orders that get appealed are predictable: Findings and Award on California Labor Code §4660 permanent disability ratings, Findings on California Labor Code §4663 apportionment, orders on serious-and-willful misconduct under California Labor Code §4553, California Labor Code §132a discrimination orders, and treatment orders following California Labor Code §4610.6 IMR. Yazdchi Law's office at 1125 W Avenue M-14 in Palmdale sits approximately 60 miles north of Boyle Heights near anchors like the LAC+USC Medical Center campus on Marengo Street, the Cesar Chavez Avenue commercial corridor, and the Sixth Street industrial district; Eman Yazdchi appears at the Los Angeles WCAB and is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California.
The Petition is filed at the Los Angeles district office, served on every party, then transmitted to the seven-commissioner Appeals Board in San Francisco for review.
Under California Labor Code §5903, a Petition for Reconsideration is filed within 25 days of service of the WCJ's order by mail (20 days if served electronically) and identifies one or more of the six statutory grounds: (a) the Appeals Board acted without or in excess of its powers, (b) the order was procured by fraud, (c) the evidence does not justify the findings of fact, (d) the petitioner has discovered new evidence, (e) the findings of fact do not support the order, or (f) the order was contrary to law. Under California Labor Code §5900, the Appeals Board has authority to grant reconsideration and issue a corrected order, deny reconsideration, or set the case for further hearing. Yazdchi Law's Boyle Heights reconsideration petitions are built on the trial record — the WCJ's transcripts, the QME reports, the AME report if any, the medical records, and the wage-loss documentation.
Under California Labor Code §5903, service of the WCJ's order by mail triggers a 25-day clock for the Petition for Reconsideration. Service by electronic means triggers a 20-day clock. The five-day difference is meaningful on a Boyle Heights appeal: the date of service stamped on the order controls, and the petition must be filed and served within the corresponding window or the WCAB loses jurisdiction. Yazdchi Law calendars both clocks on the day the order is received, files early, and never relies on the last day.
Under California Labor Code §5950, a Boyle Heights worker (or insurer) dissatisfied with the Appeals Board's order on reconsideration may petition the California Court of Appeal for a writ of review within 45 days of the Board's order. The writ is the only path from the WCAB into the Court of Appeal, and the court reviews for whether the Board acted within its powers, whether substantial evidence supports the findings, and whether the order was supported by the facts and contrary to law. The 45-day California Labor Code §5950 clock runs from the Board's denial of reconsideration — not from the original WCJ order. Yazdchi Law files writs at the Second District Court of Appeal on Boyle Heights cases when the Board's order on a California Labor Code §4660 rating or California Labor Code §4663 apportionment finding is contrary to law.
The four orders most commonly appealed from the Los Angeles WCAB on Boyle Heights cases: (1) Findings and Award orders on California Labor Code §4660 permanent disability ratings where the rating turned on contested AMA Guides 5th Edition methodology; (2) Findings on California Labor Code §4663 apportionment where the QME assigned a non-industrial percentage on thin medical evidence; (3) California Labor Code §4553 serious-and-willful misconduct findings where the safety violation evidence is in dispute; and (4) California Labor Code §132a discrimination orders where the WCJ found insufficient evidence of retaliatory motive. The California DWC 2024 Annual Report tracks reconsideration grants and denials as one measure of the Appeals Board's appellate workload.
Related on yazdchilaw.com: California workers' comp appeal pillar guide · East Los Angeles workers' comp appeal · Lincoln Heights workers' comp appeal · Boyle Heights workers' comp lawyer · California Labor Code §5903 (Petition for Reconsideration deadline).
Three deadlines drive every California workers' comp appeal: 20 days (electronic) or 25 days (mail service) for a §5900 Petition for Reconsideration; 30 days for a §4610.5 IMR appeal of a Utilization Review treatment denial; 25 days from the reconsideration denial for a §5950 Writ of Review to the California Court of Appeal.
Under California Labor Code §5903 a Petition for Reconsideration must rest on one of six specific grounds — (a) the appeals board acted without or in excess of its powers; (b) the order, decision, or award was procured by fraud; (c) the evidence does not justify the findings of fact; (d) the petitioner discovered new evidence that could not, with reasonable diligence, have been produced at hearing; (e) the findings of fact do not support the order, decision, or award; (f) any other matter required by law. A verified Petition for Reconsideration must be signed under penalty of perjury and served on every party and lien claimant on the same day it is filed with the appeals board.
The Petition is filed at the Los Angeles WCAB district where the underlying Workers' Compensation Judge (WCJ) ruling was issued, then transmitted to the seven-member Workers' Compensation Appeals Board in San Francisco for review. After filing, the assigned trial-WCJ prepares a Report and Recommendation on Reconsideration; the appeals board then issues a written decision either granting the petition (which usually orders a rehearing on a defined issue, sometimes en banc) or denying it. If the petition is denied, the only remaining remedy is a §5950 Writ of Review to the California Court of Appeal — a discretionary writ the court may grant or summarily deny within 60 days.
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Boyle Heights appeals are filed at the Los Angeles district WCAB and routed to the seven-commissioner Appeals Board in San Francisco for decision.
An injured Boyle Heights worker filing an appeal deals with the Los Angeles district WCAB at 320 W 4th Street, the seven-member Appeals Board in San Francisco that decides reconsideration petitions, and the California Second District Court of Appeal in Los Angeles that hears California Labor Code §5950 writs of review from the Board. Boyle Heights is a historically Mexican-American working-class neighborhood on the east bank of the LA River — LAC+USC is the largest employer and emergency-care hub, with restaurants on Cesar Chavez Avenue and warehouses on Sixth Street.
Boyle Heights workers' compensation trial orders are issued by the Los Angeles WCAB at 320 W 4th Street. Petitions for Reconsideration under California Labor Code §5903 are filed and served on the WCJ at the Los Angeles WCAB; the Appeals Board itself sits in San Francisco. Yazdchi Law files California Labor Code §5903 petitions at the Los Angeles WCAB on Boyle Heights cases regularly.
The Boyle Heights appellate caseload follows the city's industry verticals: LAC+USC Medical Center clinical and support staff, Cesar Chavez Avenue restaurant and retail workers, Sixth Street warehouse and food-processing workers, and the heavily Spanish-speaking residential-services workforce. Orders that get appealed turn on the medical-legal evidence — and the cumulative-trauma and back-injury verticals produce the most contested apportionment findings under California Labor Code §4663.
Three deadlines control. First, the California Labor Code §5903 25-day Petition for Reconsideration clock on a WCJ order served by mail (20 days if served electronically). Second, the California Labor Code §5950 45-day writ-of-review clock from the Appeals Board's order on reconsideration. Third, the post-writ California Supreme Court petition for review clock if the Second District denies the writ. The §5903 clock is the most frequently missed — and missing it forfeits the appeal entirely.
For a serious work injury in Boyle Heights, call 911. LAC+USC Medical Center on Marengo Street is the closest acute-care emergency department. Cal/OSHA reporting rules require the employer to notify Cal/OSHA within 8 hours of any work-related death, serious hospitalization, amputation, or loss of an eye.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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