“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 ✦
By Eman Yazdchi, Esq. · Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization · Cal Bar #285231
Common Mission Viejo retaliation patterns include sudden write-ups, schedule changes, or 'position eliminated' layoffs within weeks of filing a workers' comp claim.
A fired Mission Viejo worker is entitled to reinstatement to the same job, full back wages from the date of discharge, lifetime medical care for the underlying injury, an extra fifty percent of the workers' comp award, and the state penalty against the employer. The remedy is filed at the Long Beach WCAB within one year. Certified Specialist Eman Yazdchi (California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California) handles each.
California workers' compensation retaliation under California Labor Code §132a is a discrimination claim, not a general wrongful-termination claim. The conduct the statute prohibits is narrow: the employer discharges, threatens to discharge, or in any manner discriminates against the worker because the worker has filed or made known an intention to file a workers' comp claim, has received an award, or has testified or made known an intention to testify in another worker's case. A Mission Viejo worker who is fired three days after reporting a back injury has a textbook §132a case; a Mission Viejo worker fired six months after the injury for documented performance issues has a much harder one.
Mission Viejo's workforce is built on Mission Hospital's healthcare workforce, Saddleback College and K-12 education staff, and master-planned residential-services labor (landscaping, pool, and retail). Retaliation cases in those industries usually look the same: a sudden post-injury "performance" write-up where there was no prior discipline history, a schedule cut from full-time to part-time after a return-to-work release, a "no-call no-show" termination during medical leave the employer authorized, or a "position eliminated" layoff that happens to single out the worker who just filed a claim. The retaliation pattern itself is evidence under California precedent.
Yazdchi Law's office is at 1125 W Avenue M-14 in Palmdale, about 110 miles south of Palmdale via the 14 to the 5 and the 241 toll road. The firm files Mission Viejo §132a petitions at the Long Beach district office of the WCAB — the same district where the underlying workers' compensation claim is litigated. Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California. Section 132a is a Long Beach WCAB filing, not a civil-court case.
California's anti-retaliation statute requires reinstatement, full back wages, a fifty percent compensation increase, and a state penalty against the employer for proven retaliation.
Section 132a is a powerful but technical remedy. The substantive prohibition is short, the deadline is short, the burden of proof has a specific shift, and the available remedies are precise. The firm's job on a Mission Viejo §132a case is to file the petition on time, plead the prima facie case in detail, and force the employer to articulate a legitimate non-discriminatory reason that the trial judge can test against the record.
Section 132a prohibits an employer from discharging, threatening to discharge, or in any manner discriminating against an employee because of: (1) the filing of, or intention to file, a workers' compensation claim with the employer or the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board; (2) the receipt of, or intention to receive, an award under the workers' compensation system; or (3) the testimony, or intent to testify, in another employee's workers' compensation case. Mission Viejo retaliation cases the firm files most often involve termination after a back, shoulder, or knee injury report — a 2–4 week post-injury firing is the most common pattern.
The §132a petition must be filed within one year of the retaliatory act. The one-year clock runs from the date of the adverse employment action — the termination date, the demotion date, the date the schedule was cut — not from the date the underlying injury occurred. The clock is jurisdictional under California Supreme Court precedent; a one-year-and-one-day filing is dismissed. A Mission Viejo worker who calls the firm on day 350 of the one-year window can usually still get a petition filed on time at the Long Beach WCAB.
The worker bears the initial burden of showing a prima facie case: a workers' comp claim or intent to file one, an adverse employment action, and a causal connection inferable from the timing or context. The burden then shifts to the employer to articulate a legitimate non-discriminatory reason for the adverse action — a documented performance issue, a bona-fide reduction in force, an attendance-policy violation. The burden then returns to the worker to show pretext. For Mission Viejo §132a cases, the pretext evidence is usually a timing pattern, a missing prior-discipline record, or an inconsistent explanation across the employer's witnesses.
Section 132a remedies are statutory: reinstatement to the former position, full back pay from the date of the wrongful action, a $10,000 increase in workers' compensation benefits, and costs and expenses up to $250. The $10,000 increase is in addition to the regular workers' compensation indemnity owed on the underlying injury. For a Mission Viejo worker fired from a $25-an-hour job and out of work for nine months, the back-pay component alone runs into the tens of thousands of dollars before the §132a penalty even attaches. The Long Beach WCAB judge enters the §132a order alongside the underlying compensation award.
Related on yazdchilaw.com: California §132a workers' comp retaliation pillar · Lake Forest workers' comp retaliation · Rancho Santa Margarita workers' comp retaliation · Mission Viejo workers' comp lawyer · California Labor Code §132a (workers' comp retaliation).
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Mission Viejo retaliation petitions are filed at the Long Beach WCAB; the firm handles Mission Hospital, Saddleback College, K-12, and master-planned residential cases there.
A Mission Viejo §132a petition is filed at the Long Beach district office of the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board — the firm's verified Orange-County-area district. Section 132a is exclusively a WCAB filing; the worker cannot file the same retaliation theory in superior court (though independent civil claims like FEHA disability discrimination or Tameny public-policy wrongful termination can run in parallel). The Long Beach judge hears the §132a petition on the same calendar as the underlying workers' compensation claim.
Mission Viejo's §132a patterns cluster in the Mission Hospital medical campus, the Saddleback College vocational/trades training site, the Shops at Mission Viejo retail core, and the Crown Valley Parkway service corridor. The two most common patterns are (1) termination within 14–30 days of a back, shoulder, or knee injury report, often with a sudden post-injury "performance" write-up; and (2) a return-to-work refusal — the worker is released with work restrictions, the employer says "no available light duty," and the position is held open for an able-bodied hire. Both patterns are §132a violations when the timing pattern points back to the claim filing.
Recurring Mission Viejo-area employers in §132a files include Providence Mission Hospital, Saddleback College, Capistrano Unified and Saddleback Valley Unified school districts, and the Shops at Mission Viejo retail cluster. A predominantly middle-to-upper-middle-income suburban residential population with a Hispanic service workforce commuting in shapes the firm's caseload — undocumented and Spanish-speaking Mission Viejo workers face an extra layer of retaliation risk because the employer often pairs the workers'-comp retaliation with a threat to report immigration status. Both are unlawful under California Labor Code §132a and California Labor Code §244.
For a serious Mission Viejo workplace injury that may precede a retaliation case, call 911 first and document everything at the ER. The closest acute-care emergency-department options are Providence Mission Hospital Mission Viejo, MemorialCare Saddleback Medical Center in Laguna Hills, and Providence Mission Hospital Laguna Beach. ER intake records that show the worker reported the injury as work-related are routinely decisive evidence at a §132a trial, because they predate the employer's retaliatory narrative.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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