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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 Calabasas retaliation case wins reinstatement, full back wages, a 50% increase on benefits, and reimbursed costs after a workers' comp judge approves the petition.
A Calabasas worker fired for filing a workers' comp claim is entitled to reinstatement, lost wages, a 50% increase on benefits, and reimbursed costs — the same statutory remedy California gives every injured worker. Las Virgenes Unified, entertainment production, and 101 corridor retail files run through the Van Nuys WCAB. Certified Specialist Eman Yazdchi (California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California) prepares each petition.
California's workers' compensation retaliation statute is California Labor Code §132a — a Calabasas employer that discharges, threatens to discharge, demotes, cuts hours, reassigns to unfavorable shifts, or in any way discriminates against a worker because the worker filed or intends to file a claim faces reinstatement, lost wages, an increase in compensation of $10,000, and costs up to $250. The underlying employer-duties statute is California Labor Code §3550 — the rule requiring every employer to post the workers' comp rights notice conspicuously. Add California Labor Code §244 — the bar on immigration-status threats as retaliation — for Calabasas cases where that lever appears.
The Calabasas retaliation caseload tracks the city's industry mix: entertainment-industry production-company workers, Las Virgenes Unified School District employees, The Commons at Calabasas retail and restaurant staff, residential construction and maintenance workers in the gated communities, and healthcare workers commuting to LVMC and West Hills Hospital. Residential-construction, landscaping, and back-of-house workers are commonly Hispanic and Spanish-speaking, and California Labor Code §3351 extends California workers' compensation coverage regardless of immigration status. Yazdchi Law's office at 1125 W Avenue M-14 in Palmdale — no Calabasas satellite. Eman Yazdchi appears at the Van Nuys district WCAB and is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California.
The petition proves three elements — a protected workers' comp filing, an adverse employer action, and the causal link between the two by judge, not jury.
California Labor Code §132a is California's workers' compensation anti-retaliation statute. The 2026 California Division of Workers' Compensation reports approximately 1,200 §132a petitions filed per year statewide. The elements a Calabasas worker must prove: (1) the worker filed a workers' compensation claim or made known an intent to file; (2) the employer engaged in adverse action — termination, demotion, schedule cut, reassignment, harassment; and (3) the worker's protected activity was a substantial motivating reason for the adverse action.
Under California Labor Code §132a, a Calabasas worker who prevails on a retaliation petition recovers four remedies: (1) reinstatement to the job the worker held before the adverse action; (2) lost wages and benefits between the adverse action and reinstatement; (3) an increase in the workers' compensation award of $10,000; and (4) costs and reasonable expenses up to $250. The California Labor Code §132a remedy is in addition to the underlying workers' compensation benefits — the medical care under California Labor Code §4600, the temporary disability under California Labor Code §4653, and the permanent disability under California Labor Code §4660.
Under California Labor Code §3550, every California employer — including every Calabasas employer from the smallest restaurant on the local commercial corridor to Commons at Calabasas retail and restaurant workers — must post the State Information and Assistance Officer notice (the "your-rights" workers' compensation poster) in a conspicuous location at the worksite. A Calabasas employer that did not post the California Labor Code §3550 notice but then disciplines an injured worker for "failing to follow the right procedure" cannot easily defend the discipline: the worker never had access to the notice. The California Labor Code §3550 failure also undermines the employer's claimed legitimate-business-reason defense in the California Labor Code §132a petition.
Under California Labor Code §244, a Calabasas employer may not threaten to report or use a worker's immigration status as retaliation — and the threat itself is a separate violation supporting a California Labor Code §132a petition. Calabasas Commons at Calabasas retail and restaurant workers workers and back-of-house hospitality workers are particularly exposed because back-of-house restaurant, grounds, and household-services workers across calabasas are commonly hispanic and spanish-speaking. Yazdchi Law files California Labor Code §132a petitions paired with California Labor Code §244 allegations when the Calabasas adverse action is preceded by an "I'll call ICE" threat or by a sudden post-injury demand for re-verification of work authorization. California Labor Code §3351 makes the coverage clear: every Calabasas worker, regardless of status, has the claim.
Related on yazdchilaw.com: California §132a workers' comp retaliation pillar · Calimesa workers' comp retaliation · Carthay workers' comp retaliation · Calabasas workers' comp lawyer · California Labor Code §132a (workers' comp retaliation).
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Calabasas retaliation petitions are heard at the Van Nuys WCAB; the firm represents Las Virgenes Unified, entertainment production, and 101 corridor retail workers there.
An injured Calabasas worker hit with retaliation deals with the Van Nuys district WCAB where the California Labor Code §132a petition is filed, the underlying workers' compensation claim that may still be open, the California Labor Commissioner for any separate wage-and-hour retaliation, and the local emergency-care system that documented the original injury. Each one matters at a different step of the retaliation fight.
Calabasas workers' compensation retaliation petitions under California Labor Code §132a are heard at the Van Nuys WCAB. Yazdchi Law appears at the Van Nuys WCAB regularly on Calabasas retaliation cases — including California Labor Code §132a petitions paired with California Labor Code §244 immigration-threat allegations, California Labor Code §3550 notice-posting violations, California Labor Code §4553 serious-and-willful penalty allegations where retaliation followed serious misconduct, and California Labor Code §5811 Spanish-interpreter rights at the retaliation hearing.
A Calabasas worker who wins a California Labor Code §132a retaliation petition recovers reinstatement, lost wages between the adverse action and reinstatement, an increase in workers' compensation of $10,000, and costs up to $250 — on top of the underlying medical care under California Labor Code §4600, temporary disability under California Labor Code §4653, and permanent disability under California Labor Code §4660. In past Yazdchi Law cases, the firm's case-resultrange has reached $1,500,000 (cervical spine) and up to $5,000,000 (catastrophic spinal cord injury) — as historical magnitudes, not promised outcomes.
For a serious work injury in Calabasas, call 911. West Hills Hospital and Medical Center on Sherman Way in West Hills 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 — a failure to report often precedes the retaliatory adverse action.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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