“Eman really knows his stuff and we were very pleased with our end result.”
Myretta & Thomas Knorr
✦ 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 Newport Beach settlement combines permanent disability rating, future medical coverage, retraining voucher, and apportionment defense into one negotiated number at the Long Beach WCAB.
An injured Newport Beach worker is entitled to covered medical care, two-thirds wage replacement during disability, a permanent disability rating once stable, and a retraining voucher if the old job is gone. The settlement converts those rights into a final number. Hoag Hospital, Fashion Island retail, and Newport Harbor marine-trades files run through the Long Beach WCAB. Certified Specialist Eman Yazdchi (California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California) handles each.
A California workers' compensation settlement closes some or all of an injured worker's claim in exchange for money. There are two settlement vehicles: a Compromise & Release (a "C&R") under California Labor Code §5001 — the adequacy-review rule — which pays a lump sum and almost always closes future medical, and a Stipulation with Request for Award (a "Stip"), which leaves the case open for ongoing weekly permanent disability payments and continuing medical care under California Labor Code §4600. Both have to be approved by a judge at the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board — for Newport Beach cases, that approval hearing is heard at the Long Beach district office, which is the WCAB district office Yazdchi Law appears at for Orange County claims.
Newport Beach's workforce is built on Hoag Hospital's healthcare workforce, Fashion Island and Newport Center white-collar professional services, and the harbor and luxury hospitality cluster. Those industries produce a predictable spread of injuries: cumulative-trauma orthopedic claims, lifting and patient-handling back and shoulder injuries, slip-and-trip falls, and the occasional catastrophic crush or fall-from-height incident. The settlement value of any of those injuries comes down to a permanent disability rating under California Labor Code §4660 — the schedule converting Whole Person Impairment into a disability percentage — an apportionment fight under California Labor Code §4663 — California's rule splitting disability between industrial and non-industrial causes — the cost of projected future medical care, and the Newport Beach worker's pre-injury earnings — not to the insurer's first offer.
Yazdchi Law's office is at 1125 W Avenue M-14 in Palmdale, about 100 miles south of Palmdale via the 14 to the 5 and the 73 toll road. The firm does not maintain a Newport Beach satellite office — that is honest local logistics. Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California. The firm has obtained published case results up to $5,000,000 in catastrophic spinal-cord injury cases and routinely settles Newport Beach claims at the Long Beach WCAB.
Past results do not predict future cases. Each case turns on its specific medical evidence, apportionment under California Labor Code §4663, the rating schedule under California Labor Code §4660, and credibility findings at the WCAB. Your case will differ.Two instruments close the file — Stipulated Award preserves lifetime medical, Compromise and Release pays one lump-sum dollar amount and ends the case entirely.
The value of a Newport Beach settlement is built from four moving pieces: the permanent disability rating, the apportionment percentage charged against pre-existing factors, the cost of projected future medical care, and any temporary disability indemnity or accrued PD still owed under California Labor Code §4650. Each piece separates a fair number from the insurer's opening offer.
Permanent disability under California Labor Code §4660 starts with a Whole Person Impairment percentage from the AMA Guides to the Evaluation of Permanent Impairment, 5th Edition. The WPI is then adjusted for the worker's occupation and age, producing a final PD rating expressed as a percentage. The PD rating drives a weekly indemnity rate set under California Labor Code §4658, multiplied by the statutory number of weeks for that rating, plus any add-on under California Labor Code §4659 for life-pension benefits at PD ratings of 70% or higher. A Newport Beach worker with a single-level lumbar fusion commonly rates 40%–65% PD before occupational adjustment; a rotator-cuff repair commonly rates 12%–25%.
California Labor Code §4663 lets the employer's insurance carrier attribute part of the permanent disability to non-industrial causes — prior injuries, the natural progression of degenerative disc disease, age-related arthritis, or other industrial injuries with separate employers. The burden of proof for apportionment sits on the carrier, and asymptomatic pre-existing imaging findings are a weak basis under controlling California Court of Appeal precedent. In a Newport Beach settlement negotiation, every apportioned percentage cut to the carrier's side is money out of the worker's pocket — apportionment is the most-litigated cost driver in the entire claim.
A Compromise & Release under California Labor Code §5001 pays a single lump sum and closes the case — including future medical care in most cases. The lump sum is the present value of the unpaid permanent disability indemnity, plus an amount for projected future medical (often estimated using a Medicare Set-Aside analysis when the worker is Medicare-eligible or near-eligible), plus any disputed temporary disability or penalty exposure. The trade-off is real: a Newport Beach worker who takes a C&R gives up the right to come back for future medical care later, which is the right call for a Newport Beach younger worker with a stable injury and the wrong call for an older worker with a degenerating fusion site.
A Stipulation with Request for Award under California Labor Code §5003 pays the permanent disability indemnity over time, at a weekly rate set by the worker's PD percentage and pre-injury earnings, and leaves future medical care open under California Labor Code §4600. A Newport Beach worker with a serious orthopedic injury who needs ongoing pain-management injections, hardware-related revision potential, or long-term physical therapy is usually better served by a Stip — the open future medical award keeps the insurance carrier responsible for treatment costs that could easily reach six figures over the worker's lifetime. The trade-off is that the carrier remains in the case, which means continued Utilization Review fights under California Labor Code §4610.
Related on yazdchilaw.com: California workers' comp settlement pillar · Hermosa Beach workers' comp settlement · Long Beach workers' comp settlement · Newport Beach workers' comp lawyer · California Labor Code §4660 (permanent disability rating).
Every California workers' comp settlement turns on the same five statutory levers: §5001 (WCAB approval is required for any settlement of an industrial-injury claim), §5003 (the two settlement vehicles — Compromise & Release vs Stipulations with Request for Award), §4660 (the permanent-disability rating that drives value), §4663 (apportionment between work and non-work causes), and §4658 (the PD payment schedule that fixes the weekly rate and total weeks).
Workers' compensation indemnity and medical benefits received under California Labor Code are generally not subject to federal income tax under IRC §104(a)(1) and Treasury Regulation §1.104-1(b). California does not impose state income tax on workers' compensation either. Two narrow exceptions to flag: a worker who is also drawing Social Security Disability may see a portion of the SSDI benefit offset (and the offset amount can become indirectly taxable), and any wage-loss / retaliation / FEHA proceeds bundled into a settlement are separate buckets that follow their own tax rules. Consult a CPA before signing.
Every settlement file at the WCAB carries lien exposure that must be resolved on the same record. The main lien categories are: medical-provider liens under California Labor Code §4903 (treating doctors, MPN/non-MPN providers, interpreters, copy services); EDD State Disability Insurance liens for SDI paid while the workers' comp case was pending; Medicare conditional-payment liens under federal MSP rules; and child-support liens. The C&R or Stip Award is not approved until those liens are either paid, compromised, or formally objected to on the record. A clean lien resolution — typically negotiated in parallel with the settlement number — is what unblocks the §5001 WCAB approval.
Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780
Tap to call →Newport Beach settlements are heard at the Long Beach WCAB for Orange County; the firm represents Hoag Hospital, Fashion Island, and Harbor marine-trades workers there.
Yazdchi Law appears at the Long Beach district office of the Workers' Compensation Appeals Board on Newport Beach settlement matters — C&R approval hearings, Mandatory Settlement Conferences, and trials when the case does not settle. The Long Beach WCAB is the firm's verified Orange-County-area district appearance and is the venue where a Newport Beach settlement is approved on the record by a workers' compensation administrative law judge under California Labor Code §5001.
Newport Beach concentrates work-injury exposure in the Hoag Hospital campus on West Coast Highway, Fashion Island and Newport Center office towers, the Mariners Mile auto and marine row, and the Balboa harbor-front service zone. The injury patterns from those zones drive the firm's Newport Beach settlement caseload — cumulative-trauma orthopedic claims, lifting and patient-handling back and shoulder injuries, struck-by and fall-from-height incidents on active construction sites, and the occasional serious motor-vehicle-on-the-job collision.
Recurring Newport Beach-area employers in workers' compensation files include Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian, the Newport Center professional-services complex, Newport Harbor marine industry, and the Pacific Coast Highway hospitality cluster. Each carries its own claims-administrator pattern — some are self-insured, some run through national third-party administrators, some run through California carriers — and the negotiation posture on a Newport Beach C&R or Stip changes based on which administrator is on the other side of the file.
For a serious Newport Beach workplace injury, call 911. The closest acute-care emergency-department options are Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian, Hoag Hospital Irvine, and CHOC Children's at Mission. Under Cal/OSHA Title 8 reporting rules, the employer must report any work-related death, in-patient hospitalization, amputation, or loss of an eye to Cal/OSHA within 8 hours. Newport Beach workers should keep copies of every ER record — those records are often decisive evidence at a settlement valuation hearing.
Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.
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