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✦ Certified Specialist in Workers’ Compensation Law — Certified by the State Bar of California, Board of Legal Specialization ✦

Carthay Workers' Compensation Retaliation Lawyer

Certified Specialist (CA Bar)No Fee Unless We Win — Costs May ApplyMillions RecoveredSe Habla Español
Years of Practice
14+
Cases Handled
500+
over 14+ years of practice
Recovered
$7M+
over 14+ years of practice
Bilingual + Farsi
English + Español + Farsi

By Eman Yazdchi, Esq. · Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization · Cal Bar #285231

How does §132a retaliation work in Carthay?

Carthay retaliation cases bring job reinstatement, back wages, and a 50% penalty on top of the underlying workers' comp award at the LA WCAB.

A Carthay worker fired, demoted, written up, or rescheduled to a punitive shift after filing workers' comp is entitled to job reinstatement, back wages, and a fifty-percent penalty on top of the underlying award. California's anti-retaliation rule gives every injured worker that protection. Carthay petitions are filed and heard at the LA WCAB on West 4th Street. Certified Specialist Eman Yazdchi (California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California) prepares each one.

Under California Labor Code §132a — California's anti-retaliation rule that makes it unlawful to discharge, threaten, demote, cut hours, or otherwise discriminate against an employee who filed or made known an intention to file a workers' compensation claim — a Carthay worker fired, demoted, denied a promotion, or otherwise retaliated against has one year from the date of the discriminatory act to file a Petition for Discrimination at the Los Angeles WCAB at 320 W 4th Street, Los Angeles. The §132a remedy is independent of the underlying workers' compensation claim — even a denied or contested claim supports a §132a petition.

The legal requirements: the worker must show (1) they suffered an adverse employment action (termination, demotion, punitive schedule change, refusal of modified duty, or other material change), (2) the employer knew the worker had filed or intended to file a comp claim, and (3) a causal link exists — the claim filing was at least a contributing cause of the adverse act. Causation is the fight. Under California Labor Code §5551, the WCAB retains jurisdiction over §132a petitions even when the underlying comp case has closed. California Labor Code §3551 — the employer's mandatory posting and notification duty that requires a DWC-1 form within one working day of notice of injury — and California Labor Code §5401 — the 24-hour DWC-1 form delivery requirement — create the paper trail that establishes timing: was the DWC-1 filed before the adverse action? That sequence is the first document the §132a file needs.

The §132a remedy: the WCAB award adds 50% to the underlying workers' compensation award (up to a $10,000 increase) plus costs and expenses. If the worker was terminated, reinstatement to the same position or a comparable one is available. Lost wages from the date of the retaliatory termination through reinstatement are recoverable. Under §132a, the employer and insurer are jointly liable for the award — the insurer cannot escape the penalty by blaming the employer. California Labor Code §244 — the rule that bars threatening immigration-status reporting as retaliation for asserting a Labor Code right — applies whenever a Carthay employer uses undocumented status to chill the §132a petition, and California Labor Code §3351 — California's coverage rule reaching every worker regardless of immigration status — confirms the petition is available to every Carthay worker without exception. Call (661) 273-1780.

What does the §132a petition actually require to win on a Carthay case?

The petition requires proof the worker filed a comp claim, suffered adverse action, and that the timing and motive connect the two events.

Under California Labor Code §132a, the Carthay worker must prove (1) the worker engaged in protected activity (filing or expressing the intent to file a workers' compensation claim), (2) the employer took an adverse employment action against the worker (firing, demotion, reduced hours, denied accommodation, denied promotion), and (3) a causal connection between the protected activity and the adverse action — that the workers' compensation claim was a substantial motivating reason for the adverse action. The WCAB applies a burden-shifting analysis: once the worker establishes a prima facie case, the employer must articulate a legitimate non-discriminatory reason, and the worker then must prove that reason is pretext for retaliation.

What does §132a actually award a Carthay worker who wins?

Under California Labor Code §132a, a successful Petition for Discrimination at the Los Angeles WCAB recovers (1) a 50% increase in compensation up to a statutory cap (typically $10,000), (2) reinstatement to the pre-injury job or its equivalent, (3) back wages and benefits, and (4) reimbursement of work expenses incurred because of the discriminatory act. The §132a award is on top of the underlying workers' compensation claim — the Carthay worker collects California Labor Code §4658 permanent disability indemnity on the injury claim and the §132a discrimination award on the retaliation claim. The remedies do not duplicate each other.

What is the §132a one-year deadline and what counts as the discriminatory act?

Under California Labor Code §132a, the Carthay worker has one year from the date of the discriminatory act to file the Petition for Discrimination at the Los Angeles WCAB. The discriminatory act is the firing, demotion, threat, denied promotion, or denied reasonable accommodation — not the date the worker filed the workers' compensation claim. A Carthay worker fired six months after filing a workers' compensation claim has one year from the firing — not one year from the claim filing — to file the §132a petition. The clock is strict, and missing it ends the §132a case. Yazdchi Law calendars the §132a one-year clock the day the firing or other adverse act occurs.

How does §3550 interact with a Carthay §132a retaliation claim?

Under California Labor Code §3550, every California employer must post in a conspicuous location a notice of workers' compensation rights — including the right to file a claim, the right to medical care, and the right to be free from discrimination for filing. A Carthay employer that did not post the §3550 notice has a weaker defense to a §132a petition: the worker's claim of being deterred from filing is supported by the missing notice. California Labor Code §3551 adds the obligation to provide written notice of workers' compensation rights to new employees at the time of hire. These California Labor Code §3550 and California Labor Code §3551 notice requirements form the documentary backbone of a Carthay §132a retaliation claim — Yazdchi Law subpoenas the workplace posting record and the new-hire orientation file as part of every §132a case.

Related on yazdchilaw.com: California §132a workers' comp retaliation pillar · Castaic workers' comp retaliation · Crenshaw workers' comp retaliation · Carthay workers' comp lawyer · California Labor Code §132a (workers' comp retaliation).

Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780

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What local resources should a Carthay worker know for a §132a retaliation claim?

Carthay petitions are filed at the LA WCAB on West 4th Street; the firm appears there weekly on Westside hospitality and homeowner-staff cases.

An injured Carthay worker filing a §132a Petition for Discrimination deals with the Los Angeles district WCAB at 320 W 4th Street, the employer's defense counsel, the Cal/OSHA whistleblower-protection program if the discriminatory act followed a safety complaint, and the California Department of Industrial Relations Division of Labor Standards Enforcement for wage-and-hour cross-claims. Carthay is a Mid-City residential neighborhood near the Cedars-Sinai medical complex — primary employment is residential-services for the Carthay Circle estates and clinical commuters to Cedars-Sinai.

Which WCAB office hears Carthay §132a petitions?

Carthay §132a Petitions for Discrimination are filed and heard at the Los Angeles WCAB at 320 W 4th Street. Yazdchi Law appears at the Los Angeles WCAB on §132a petitions for Carthay workers regularly — and litigates the burden-shifting causation analysis on the trial record.

Which Carthay employers and worksites drive the §132a caseload?

The Carthay §132a caseload follows the city's industry verticals: Carthay residential-services workers (housekeeping, landscape, security), San Vicente Boulevard clinical commuters to Cedars-Sinai, Fairfax Avenue retail and food-service workers, and the small-business workforce along Olympic and Pico Boulevards. Restaurant, retail, warehouse, and clinical-staff verticals produce the most §132a petitions — the workers in these verticals are most often terminated shortly after filing a workers' compensation claim, and the temporal proximity supports the causation element.

  • the Carthay Circle residential district, the San Vicente Boulevard medical corridor, and the Fairfax Avenue commercial strip
  • Carthay residential-services workers (housekeeping, landscape, security), San Vicente Boulevard clinical commuters to Cedars-Sinai, Fairfax Avenue retail and food-service workers, and the small-business workforce along Olympic and Pico Boulevards

What is the firm deadline on a Carthay §132a retaliation claim?

One year from the date of the discriminatory act under California Labor Code §132a. The clock runs from the date of the firing, demotion, or other adverse action — not the date the workers' compensation claim was filed. Missing the one-year California Labor Code §132a clock ends the discrimination case forever — even if the underlying workers' compensation claim is still open. Yazdchi Law calendars the §132a clock the day the discriminatory act is reported.

Emergency care and hospitals serving Carthay

For a serious work injury in Carthay, call 911. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center on Beverly Boulevard 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.

Frequently Asked Questions

My Carthay employer fired me after I filed a workers' comp claim — is that legal?

No. Under California Labor Code §132a, it is unlawful for any California employer to discharge, threaten to discharge, or in any manner discriminate against an employee because the employee filed or made known an intention to file a workers' compensation claim. A Carthay worker fired in retaliation for filing a workers' compensation claim has one year from the date of the firing to file a Petition for Discrimination at the Los Angeles WCAB at 320 W 4th Street. Even a denied or contested workers' compensation claim supports a §132a petition.

How long do I have to file a §132a retaliation case in Carthay?

One year from the date of the discriminatory act, under California Labor Code §132a. The clock runs from the firing, demotion, denied promotion, or other adverse action — not from the date the workers' compensation claim was filed. A Carthay worker fired three months after filing a claim has one year from the firing — twelve months later — to file the §132a petition. Missing the one-year California Labor Code §132a clock ends the discrimination case forever. Yazdchi Law calendars the deadline the day the adverse act is reported.

What does a §132a win actually pay in a Carthay case?

A successful §132a Petition under California Labor Code §132a recovers a 50% increase in compensation up to a statutory cap (typically $10,000), reinstatement to the pre-injury job or its equivalent, back wages and benefits, and reimbursement of work expenses incurred because of the discriminatory act. The §132a award is independent of the underlying workers' compensation claim — the Carthay worker collects California Labor Code §4658 permanent disability indemnity on the injury claim and the §132a discrimination remedy on the retaliation claim. The recoveries do not duplicate each other.

Can my Carthay employer claim my firing was for performance and not retaliation?

Yes — and that is the most common employer defense to a §132a petition. The burden-shifting analysis under California Labor Code §132a requires the Carthay worker to first establish a prima facie case of retaliation (protected activity, adverse action, causal connection), at which point the employer must articulate a legitimate non-discriminatory reason for the firing (performance, attendance, reorganization). The worker then must prove the reason is pretext — typically with evidence of temporal proximity, disparate treatment of similarly situated co-workers, or shifting employer explanations. Yazdchi Law litigates pretext on the trial record at the Los Angeles WCAB.

Do I need a separate workers' compensation claim to file a §132a petition in Carthay?

Yes. California Labor Code §132a requires that the protected activity be the filing of (or expressing the intent to file) a workers' compensation claim. A Carthay worker with no underlying workers' compensation claim has no §132a remedy — though the same set of facts may support a separate wrongful-termination claim in superior court or a Cal/OSHA whistleblower complaint. Yazdchi Law files the underlying California Labor Code §5500 Application for Adjudication of Claim alongside the §132a Petition so both proceed together at the Los Angeles WCAB.

What does Yazdchi Law cost on a Carthay §132a retaliation case?

Workers' compensation attorney fees in California are contingent under California Labor Code §4906 and approved by the WCAB judge — typically 15% of the §132a award and the underlying workers' compensation recovery. A Carthay worker pays nothing upfront, nothing for case costs unless the case recovers, and nothing if the §132a petition is denied. The fee structure means a Carthay retaliation claim costs the worker no out-of-pocket money to file — Yazdchi Law absorbs the cost of records, depositions, and trial preparation until the case recovers.

Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.

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