“Very thankful for everything they did for us. Always responsive, reassured us every step of the way and obtained a great result.”
Miguel Orellana
✦ Certified Specialist in Workers’ Compensation Law — Certified by the State Bar of California, Board of Legal Specialization ✦
Serving injured workers across California. Board-certified specialist; no fee unless we win.
By Eman Yazdchi, Esq. · Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization
In California, an injured Maywood worker recovers medical care, two-thirds wage replacement, and a permanent disability rating — regardless of immigration status. Slauson Avenue, garment, food-processing, and day-labor injuries all qualify. Yazdchi Law, a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law firm, handles these at the Los Angeles WCAB. Request a free case review.
Maywood is a 1.18-square-mile Gateway City that, along with Cudahy, is one of the smallest by area in Los Angeles County and among the densest in California by population per square mile. The workforce is roughly 97% Hispanic or Latino — overwhelmingly Spanish-speaking — and concentrates in the Slauson Avenue commercial corridor (retail, restaurants, small services), in garment and light-manufacturing shops on the LA-River-side industrial belt, in food-processing and warehouse operations that ring the city on its Vernon and Bell edges, and in day-labor construction and landscaping crews working the residential streets between Atlantic and Eastern Avenues.
The injuries that fill the Maywood caseload track those industries directly. Slauson Avenue restaurant cooks and line workers sustain burn injuries from open flames and fryers, slips on greasy back-of-house floors, and cumulative-trauma wrist and shoulder injuries from prep work. Garment workers in Maywood's sewing shops along the river-side belt develop cervical and lumbar disc disease from prolonged seated machine work and bilateral carpal tunnel from sewing-machine operation. Food-processing workers on the Vernon and Bell edges sustain knife lacerations, disassembly-line repetitive-motion injuries, and cold-storage musculoskeletal injuries. Day-labor construction crews on small residential remodels fall from ladders without fall-protection, sustain hand and finger amputations from saws, and develop cumulative low-back trauma — and many of the small employers carry no workers' compensation policy.
Yazdchi Law's office at 1125 W Avenue M-14 in Palmdale sits about 70 miles north of Maywood via the 14 and the 5 — no Maywood satellite. Eman Yazdchi appears at the Los Angeles WCAB on Maywood cases (ZIP 90270 routes to LA under the DWC's ZIP-to-district mapping) and is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California.
California workers' compensation is a no-fault system under California Labor Code §3600 — an injured Maywood worker does not have to prove the employer was negligent. Coverage reaches every worker under California Labor Code §3351, regardless of immigration status and regardless of how the worker was paid.
Yes — California Labor Code §3351 extends California workers' compensation coverage to every worker, regardless of immigration status. An undocumented Maywood garment-shop sewer, food-processing worker, restaurant cook, or day-labor construction worker has the same right to medical care under California Labor Code §4600, temporary disability under California Labor Code §4653, and a permanent disability rating under California Labor Code §4660 as any other worker. The insurer cannot ask about immigration status in the claim process or at any QME or AME medical-legal evaluation. The DWC-1 form, the medical exams, and the WCAB hearings proceed on the worker's injury — not on the worker's papers.
California Labor Code §244 makes it unlawful for a California employer to threaten an employee's immigration status as retaliation for exercising labor rights, including filing a workers' compensation claim. A Maywood employer that threatens to verify immigration status, contact federal immigration authorities, or report the worker because the worker filed a claim is violating §244 — and the threat itself becomes evidence supporting a California Labor Code §132a retaliation petition (reinstatement, back wages, a $10,000 increase in compensation, and costs up to $250). The §132a petition is filed at the Los Angeles WCAB alongside the underlying Maywood claim.
Under California Labor Code §5811, every Spanish-speaking Maywood worker has the right to a qualified interpreter at WCAB hearings, depositions, and medical-legal evaluations — and the cost is charged to the defendant. The firm conducts every Maywood intake in Spanish and confirms a qualified §5811 interpreter at every QME or AME exam under California Labor Code §4062.2 and at every Los Angeles WCAB hearing.
Under California Labor Code §3700, every California employer must carry workers' compensation insurance — failure is a misdemeanor under California Labor Code §3700.5. Many small Slauson Avenue restaurants, garment shops, and day-labor contractors in Maywood operate without coverage. If the Maywood employer carried no policy, the worker has parallel paths under California Labor Code §3706: file against the Uninsured Employers Benefits Trust Fund (which pays benefits and then pursues the employer), and sue the employer in civil court outside the exclusive-remedy bar — where pain-and-suffering damages, full lost wages, and punitive damages are available. The §3706 civil suit is the lever.
Under California Labor Code §4600, the Maywood employer or its insurer must provide all medical treatment reasonably required — at no cost to the worker. The injured Maywood worker reports the injury in writing within 30 days under California Labor Code §5400, the employer must provide a DWC-1 form within one working day under California Labor Code §5401, and up to $10,000 in treatment must be authorized within one day of the completed DWC-1 under California Labor Code §5402(c). Temporary total disability under California Labor Code §4653 pays two-thirds of average weekly earnings under California Labor Code §4650. Treatment denials are appealed via Independent Medical Review within 30 days under California Labor Code §4610.5.
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Maywood workers' compensation cases are heard at the Los Angeles district office of the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board at 320 W. 4th Street, 9th Floor, Los Angeles 90013 — the district that covers Maywood, Bell, Bell Gardens, Cudahy, Huntington Park, Pico Rivera, Commerce, Vernon, and most of central and southeast Los Angeles County. Yazdchi Law appears at the Los Angeles WCAB regularly on Maywood cases — including those with California Labor Code §3700 / California Labor Code §3706 uninsured-employer civil suits and California Labor Code §132a retaliation petitions.
Cash-paid status does not eliminate the worker's right to file. Under California Labor Code §3351, coverage extends regardless of immigration status; under California's broad employee-presumption rules, a worker performing services for a hiring entity is presumed an employee unless the entity proves otherwise. If the Maywood employer has no policy, file against the Uninsured Employers Benefits Trust Fund and consider a parallel California Labor Code §3706 civil suit. Under California Labor Code §244, immigration retaliation is unlawful; under California Labor Code §5811, every WCAB proceeding includes a Spanish interpreter paid by the defendant.
For a serious work injury in Maywood, call 911. The closest acute-care emergency departments are St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood (3630 E. Imperial Highway), Adventist Health White Memorial in Boyle Heights, and Los Angeles General Medical Center (LAC+USC) in Boyle Heights for major trauma. Under Cal/OSHA reporting rules, the employer must notify Cal/OSHA within 8 hours of any work-related death, hospitalization, amputation, or loss of an eye — keep a record of the report.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., May 2026.
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