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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
Camarillo retaliation pressure clusters in Premium Outlets retail, Verizon Wireless campus, and Camarillo Airport aerospace — large-employer sectors where injured workers face pushback.
A Camarillo worker fired, demoted, or pressured after filing a workers' comp claim is entitled to reinstatement, lost wages, a ten-thousand-dollar increase on the underlying award, and costs. Camarillo Premium Outlets, Verizon Wireless campus, and Camarillo Airport aerospace retaliation petitions run at the Oxnard WCAB. Certified Specialist Eman Yazdchi (California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California) files each one.
California Labor Code §3550 — the employer's duty to post workers' comp rights notice at every worksite — adds a separate ground for rebutting employer defenses in the §132a case. The remedies are reinstatement, back wages, and an increase in compensation by one-half up to $10,000. Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California, and files §132a petitions at the Oxnard WCAB on Camarillo files regularly.
The retaliation petition documents the protected filing, identifies the adverse action, ties motive to the claim, and asks the WCAB for reinstatement and the penalty.
California Labor Code §132a is unusual in California law — it gives the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board, not a civil court, jurisdiction over the discrimination claim. The petition is filed at the same district WCAB that handles the underlying injury claim, and the remedies are statutory rather than damages-driven.
Under California Labor Code §132a, it is illegal for a California employer to discharge, threaten to discharge, or in any way discriminate against a worker because the worker has filed (or stated an intent to file) a workers' compensation claim, has testified or made known an intent to testify in another worker's claim, or has received a rating, award, or settlement. A Camarillo employer that terminates a returning warehouse worker the week after she files a DWC-1, writes up a healthcare worker for "performance" after a Cal/OSHA report, or moves a forklift operator to a punitive shift after a treatment request is a California Labor Code §132a fact pattern.
California Labor Code §132a provides three categories of remedy: reinstatement to the position the worker held before the discrimination; reimbursement of lost wages and work-benefits from the date of discrimination to the date of reinstatement (or the date the worker is otherwise made whole); and an increase in compensation by one-half, up to a maximum of $10,000. Costs up to $250 are also recoverable. The Camarillo worker can pursue the California Labor Code §132a petition in parallel with the underlying injury claim at the Oxnard WCAB.
Under California Labor Code §3550, every California employer must post a notice in a conspicuous place at each workplace describing workers' compensation rights — the right to medical care, the right to indemnity benefits, the right to file a claim, and the right to a lawyer. A Camarillo employer who fails to post that notice cannot then argue that the worker missed a filing deadline because she did not know her rights. A California Labor Code §3550 failure is a separate ground for tolling deadlines and rebutting employer defenses, and it frequently surfaces alongside the California Labor Code §132a claim against the same employer.
Temporal proximity is the most powerful single fact — termination, demotion, or punitive transfer that occurs within days or weeks of the injury report, the DWC-1 filing, or the Cal/OSHA complaint. Comparative evidence is the second — other Camarillo workers in the same role who were not injured were treated differently. Documentary evidence is the third — sudden "performance" write-ups in a previously clean personnel file, scheduling changes that conflict with documented restrictions, or pre-termination meetings that include references to the workers' comp claim. The California Labor Code §132a petition is filed at the Oxnard district WCAB and tried alongside the underlying injury claim.
Related on yazdchilaw.com: California §132a workers' comp retaliation pillar · San Marino workers' comp retaliation · Ontario workers' comp retaliation · Camarillo workers' comp lawyer · California Labor Code §132a (workers' comp retaliation).
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Tap to call →Camarillo retaliation petitions are filed at the Oxnard WCAB; the firm appears there on Premium Outlets and Verizon Wireless campus retaliation files.
Camarillo California Labor Code §132a retaliation petitions are heard at the Oxnard district office of the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board at 2220 E Gonzales Rd, Oxnard, CA 93036. The district covers Oxnard, Ventura, Camarillo, Simi Valley, Thousand Oaks, Moorpark, Fillmore, Port Hueneme, Santa Paula, Ojai, Newbury Park, Oak Park, and the rest of Ventura County. The petition is filed in the same case file as the underlying injury claim, and it is tried in front of the same judge handling the comp claim. Yazdchi Law files California Labor Code §132a petitions at the Oxnard WCAB regularly.
California Labor Code §132a provides reinstatement to the position held before the discrimination, full back wages from the date of discrimination to reinstatement (or the date the worker is otherwise made whole), and an increase in compensation by one-half up to a maximum of $10,000. Costs up to $250 are also recoverable. Where the Camarillo retaliation produces emotional-distress damages outside the workers' comp ladder, a separate civil claim under FEHA may be available against the same employer.
A copy of the DWC-1 with the date of filing, the worker's complete personnel file (especially performance reviews from before and after the injury), the schedule and assignment records for the months around the injury, every text or email referencing the claim or the injury, witness statements from coworkers in the same retail role, and any Cal/OSHA complaint records. Treatment at St. John's Pleasant Valley Hospital on Lynn Road continues under California Labor Code §4600 regardless of the California Labor Code §132a fight.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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