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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
If you were hurt on the job in Hawaiian Gardens, you have rights. You do not have to face the insurance company on your own.
Whether you deal cards at the casino, run a register on Carson Street, carry trays on the floor, or keep up city parks and recreation facilities, a workplace injury opens real benefits. Your medical bills get paid in full. Wage checks arrive while you recover. If the damage is lasting, you receive a cash award. None of this requires proving your employer did anything wrong.
Three steps to take right now:
You have one year to file. That deadline moves faster than most people expect. Call (661) 273-1780 today.
Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law. He is certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California (CA Bar #285231). He appears regularly at the Long Beach WCAB, which handles every Hawaiian Gardens case.
If a Hawaiian Gardens job caused your injury, you very likely qualify for benefits. You do not need to prove your employer was at fault.
Most hurt workers ask the same question: do I really have a case? The answer is usually yes. California workers' comp is a no-fault system. You show that the injury happened during your job. You do not need to prove anyone was careless.
That covers a wide range of situations. A floor dealer whose wrists broke down from years of chip handling and card shuffling. A cocktail server who slipped on a wet surface near the bar station. A security officer struck during a patron altercation. A Carson Street market worker who strained her back stacking produce. A city parks employee who fell from a truck on Del Valle Drive. All of these qualify.
Immigration status does not matter. California covers every employee. Undocumented workers qualify for the same medical care and wage checks as anyone else. They also have the right to a permanent disability award.
Two types of injuries both count. A specific injury happens on one day: a fall, a collision, a burn, an assault. A build-up injury develops over months or years of the same repeated motion, like dealing cards or lifting trays. California covers both.
Your benefits include full medical care paid by the insurer, wage checks while you heal, a cash award for lasting damage, and a retraining voucher if your old job is gone.
Medical care comes first. The medical-treatment statute puts the full cost on the insurer from the date of injury. You pay no deductibles and no copays. That covers visits, imaging, surgery, physical therapy, and prescriptions.
Labor Code §4600: "Medical, surgical, chiropractic, acupuncture, and hospital treatment, including nursing, medicines, medical and surgical supplies, crutches, and apparatuses, including orthotic and prosthetic devices and optical and hearing aids, as is reasonably required to cure or relieve the injured worker from the effects of his or her injury shall be provided by the employer."
Wage replacement is called temporary disability. While you cannot work, you receive two-thirds of your average weekly wage, up to the state cap. You can receive it for up to 104 weeks within a five-year window.
Permanent disability pays a cash award if your body does not fully recover. A doctor scores the lasting damage as a percentage. That percentage sets how many weeks of payments you receive.
Mileage to all medical appointments is also reimbursable.
If the injury keeps you from returning to your old job, ask about the retraining voucher. It is worth up to $6,000. Your employer must first try to place you in different work. If they cannot, you qualify for the voucher to use toward school or a new certification.
Your award depends on the lasting damage, your age, your job duties, and your future care needs. No honest lawyer quotes a dollar figure before reviewing your file.
There is no fixed price for a workers' comp claim. The award reflects your permanent disability rating. A doctor assigns that rating once your condition has stabilized. For injuries since 2013, the law adjusts that rating based on your age and the demands of your job. Physically harder work tends to push the rating higher.
The table below shows general California ranges.
| Injury severity | Typical permanent-disability rating | Approximate value range |
|---|---|---|
| Minor strain or sprain, full recovery expected | 1% to 8% | $3,000 to $15,000 |
| Moderate injury requiring surgery, some lasting limits | 10% to 24% | $30,000 to $90,000 |
| Serious injury, single-level spinal fusion | 25% to 39% | $90,000 to $200,000 |
| Severe injury, multi-level fusion or major joint | 40% to 69% | $200,000 to $450,000 |
| Catastrophic, spinal-cord injury or TBI | 70% to 100% | $500,000 and above |
These are general California ranges, not a prediction. Your actual award depends on your disability rating, age, occupation, and future medical care. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes.
Yazdchi Law has recovered $5,000,000 for a catastrophic spinal-cord injury and $1,500,000 for a cervical-spine injury across its California caseload. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes. Call (661) 273-1780 for a free, honest read on your situation.
A denial is not final. You still get up to $10,000 in medical care while they investigate. And you can challenge any denied treatment within 30 days.
After you file the DWC-1, the insurer has 90 days to accept or deny. That is sometimes called the 90-day decision rule. If they miss that window, the law presumes your claim is valid.
During those 90 days, you are still owed up to $10,000 in medical care right away. The insurer cannot freeze your treatment while they investigate.
If they deny a specific procedure, like a carpal-tunnel release for a casino dealer or a shoulder repair for a cocktail server, you can challenge it through Independent Medical Review within 30 days of the denial. An outside physician reviews your records against the state treatment guidelines. That decision is binding in nearly every case.
If your employer fires you, cuts your hours, or punishes you for filing, that is illegal retaliation. The anti-retaliation rule lets you win your job back, your lost wages, and a penalty of up to $10,000.
If you lose at a WCAB hearing, you can file a Petition for Reconsideration within 25 days if the ruling was mailed, or 20 days if it arrived electronically. A Writ of Review to the Court of Appeal is the next step, within 45 days. If your condition worsens after the case closes, you may ask to reopen it within five years of the injury date.
Report within 30 days. File your claim within one year. For a build-up injury, the clock starts when a doctor first links your condition to your work.
Two clocks run at once, and missing either gives the insurer an opening. Tell your employer within 30 days. File your formal claim within one year of the injury date.
For a casino dealer with years of wear on the wrists or shoulders, the one-year clock has a special rule. It does not start when the pain began. It starts the day you felt the disability and a doctor connected the condition to your job. That distinction can save a claim that seems too old to file.
| Action | Deadline | Rule |
|---|---|---|
| Tell your employer in writing | 30 days from injury | §5400 |
| File your claim (DWC-1) | 1 year from injury date | §5405 |
| Build-up injury clock starts | Day you felt it and knew work caused it | §5412 |
| Insurer must accept or deny | 90 days after DWC-1 filed | §5402 |
| Appeal a denied treatment | 30 days from the denial | §4610.5 |
Not sure where your clock stands? Call (661) 273-1780 for a free review.
Every rule described above rests on the California Labor Code sections below. Each link opens the official statute text.
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist, one of fewer than 1% of California attorneys with that credential, and he appears at the Long Beach WCAB where every Hawaiian Gardens case is heard.
Eman Yazdchi (CA Bar #285231) is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law. He is certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California. Fewer than 1% of California attorneys hold this designation. He has represented hundreds of injured California workers and appears regularly at the Long Beach WCAB, the district office that handles every Hawaiian Gardens file. More about Eman Yazdchi. Verify his State Bar profile.
Hawaiian Gardens cases are decided at the Long Beach district office of the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board. The address is 300 Oceangate, Suite 200, Long Beach 90802. That district covers Hawaiian Gardens, Lakewood, Cerritos, Norwalk, and southeast Los Angeles County. Expedited hearings, mandatory settlement conferences, and trials all run on its calendar. Yazdchi Law appears there regularly for casino workers, retail employees, and city staff from Hawaiian Gardens.
Hawaiian Gardens covers just one square mile. Its working population is concentrated in a small number of places:
Common diagnoses include bilateral wrist tendinopathy and carpal tunnel from years of card dealing, shoulder and back breakdown from cocktail-service shifts, patron-assault and psychiatric injuries for table staff and security officers, slip-and-fall trauma on casino floors and in kitchen areas, and lifting strains in retail and stockroom work.
Our Palmdale office at 1125 W Avenue M-14, Suite A serves all of greater Los Angeles County. That includes Hawaiian Gardens and the full Long Beach WCAB district. Eman Yazdchi appears at the Long Beach WCAB on Hawaiian Gardens matters on a regular basis.
Our office is bilingual. The majority of Hawaiian Gardens's working community is Hispanic and Spanish-speaking. Every worker also has the right to a qualified interpreter at every WCAB hearing at no charge to the worker.
The firm's historical case results reach $5,000,000 for a catastrophic spinal-cord injury and $1,500,000 for a cervical-spine injury. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes; each case is different.
For a serious work injury on the casino floor, in a restaurant kitchen, or at a Carson Street job site, call 911. The closest emergency departments are Long Beach Memorial Medical Center, a Level II trauma center about 6 miles west, Lakewood Regional Medical Center, and La Palma Intercommunity Hospital about 3 miles south across the Orange County line. When you reach the doctor, say clearly that the injury happened at work. That notation protects your claim from the first visit forward.
Nothing up front, and nothing unless we win. Attorney fees are set by the WCAB judge, typically 12 to 15 percent of what we recover for you.
You pay nothing to start. Workers' comp attorney fees in California are set by the WCAB judge. The typical range is 12 to 15 percent of what we recover. If there is no recovery, you owe nothing. A casino dealer and a city maintenance worker receive the same quality of representation under that arrangement.
Related Hawaiian Gardens workers' comp pages: settlement, denied claim, appeal, and retaliation. Past results do not guarantee future outcomes; each case is different.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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