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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 Huntington Park worker fired, demoted, or pressured after filing a workers' comp claim is entitled to reinstatement, lost wages, a fifty-percent increase on the underlying award up to ten thousand dollars, and costs — regardless of immigration status. Pacific Boulevard retail, garment-corridor manufacturing, and Southeast LA warehouse retaliation petitions run at the LA WCAB. Certified Specialist Eman Yazdchi (California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California) files each.
Workers' compensation retaliation in Huntington Park — the South Los Angeles Hispanic city of Los Angeles County — is a distinct cause of action with its own statute, its own statute of limitations, and its own forum. Labor Code §132a — California's anti-discrimination rule that makes post-injury discharge, demotion, or hours-cutting illegal — makes it unlawful for an 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, received a rating, award, or settlement, or testified in another's workers' comp proceeding. §3550 — the employer's duty to post and provide written notice of workers' compensation rights — requires the employer to post and provide written notice of workers' compensation rights — a §3550 violation is frequently the evidentiary backbone of a §132a discrimination case. Yazdchi Law Group attorney Eman Yazdchi is a State Bar of California Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law (California Bar #285231) — a credential granted by the California Board of Legal Specialization (CBLS) of the State Bar of California, administered by the State Bar Legal Specialization (SBLS) program. Call (661) 273-1780 for a CBLS-credentialed review of your termination, demotion, or hours reduction following a workers' comp claim at WCAB Los Angeles.
The retaliation framework prohibits any post-filing adverse action motivated by the claim and adds an immigration-threat parallel protection for Spanish-first retail and garment workers.
Labor Code §132a is the workers' compensation discrimination statute. It is filed as a Petition for §132a Discrimination at WCAB Los Angeles — not in Los Angeles County Superior Court — and the workers' compensation judge has exclusive jurisdiction within the WCAB system. The §132a remedies are statutorily defined: a 50% increase in workers' compensation benefits (capped at $10,000 by statute), reinstatement, lost wages and work benefits, and costs and reasonable attorney's fees. The §132a procedural posture mirrors a regular workers' compensation claim — DOR to MSC to trial — but the substantive showing is closer to a discrimination case than a personal-injury case.
The §132a prima facie case requires three elements: (1) the employee was injured at work or filed a workers' compensation claim; (2) the employer took adverse action against the employee — termination, demotion, hours cut, schedule change, denial of accommodation, threats; and (3) a causal connection between the protected activity and the adverse action. Once the employee makes a §132a prima facie showing, the burden shifts to the employer to articulate a legitimate, non-discriminatory business reason. The employee then has the opportunity to show that the proffered reason is a pretext for §132a discrimination. Temporal proximity between the workers' comp filing and the adverse action — measured in days or weeks, not months — is the most decisive circumstantial evidence at WCAB Los Angeles.
Timing is decisive on filing too. A §132a Petition must be filed within one year from the date of the alleged discriminatory act. The one-year §132a clock runs from the discrete adverse action — the termination, the demotion, the hours cut — not from when the underlying workers' compensation claim was filed. Missed §132a deadlines are not curable, and the §132a one-year limitations period is shorter than most parallel superior-court limitations under FEHA or common-law wrongful termination.
§3550 provides the documentary evidence that wins §132a cases. §3550 requires every California employer with one or more employees to post a notice in a conspicuous place reciting the employee's right to workers' compensation, the duty to report injuries promptly, the prohibition on retaliation, and the toll-free number for the Information and Assistance Unit. §3550 also requires written notice to each new hire and to each employee who reports an injury. Employers who fail §3550 frequently fail §132a — the missing notice supports the inference that the employer's adverse action was discriminatory rather than business-driven, and a §3550 failure undercuts any employer claim that the employee should have known company workers' comp policy. According to the California DWC 2024 Annual Report, §132a petitions are a small but high-impact share of WCAB filings; the WCIRB 2024 data confirms that represented §132a claims at WCAB Los Angeles resolve materially more favorably than pro-per filings. The §132a remedy stack — 50% benefit increase, reinstatement, lost wages, attorney's fees — is a Certified Specialist (California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California)'s lever, and the §3550 evidentiary backbone is built from documents already in the employer's personnel and safety file.
Related on yazdchilaw.com: California §132a workers' comp retaliation pillar · Huntington Beach workers' comp retaliation · Exposition Park workers' comp retaliation · Huntington Park workers' comp lawyer · California Labor Code §132a (workers' comp retaliation).
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Huntington Park retaliation petitions are filed at the LA WCAB; the firm appears there on Pacific Boulevard retail, garment, and Southeast LA warehouse files.
WCAB Los Angeles has exclusive jurisdiction over §132a discrimination petitions for Huntington Park workers. The §132a petition is filed in the WCAB system — not in Los Angeles County Superior Court — and is heard by a workers' compensation judge on the regular MSC and trial calendar at WCAB Los Angeles. A Certified Specialist (California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California) will typically file the §132a alongside or shortly after the underlying claim so a single MSC calendar slot resolves both.
Termination is the headline. But §132a covers any discriminatory action — demotion, schedule change designed to force resignation, hours cut, denial of light-duty work the employee can perform, refusal to engage in the §4658.7 voucher process, discriminatory enforcement of attendance rules, and threats. Huntington Park's economic mix as a South Los Angeles Hispanic city sees §132a actions across retail, hospitality, warehousing, construction, and healthcare employers, and the §132a fact pattern is often layered with parallel FEHA disability-discrimination or wrongful-termination claims that proceed in Los Angeles County Superior Court.
One year from the date of the discriminatory act. The §132a clock runs from the discrete adverse action — the termination, the demotion, the hours cut — not from when the underlying workers' compensation injury occurred or when the DWC-1 was filed. Calendar the §132a one-year deadline the day the adverse action takes effect, and calendar any parallel FEHA one-year (DFEH right-to-sue) or §3550-related deadlines at the same time. WCAB Los Angeles judges treat §132a calendaring strictly — a one-day late §132a petition is dismissed without reaching the merits, and no §5402(b)-style presumption rescues the late filing for Huntington Park workers regardless of how strong the underlying retaliation facts are.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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