Skip to main content

✦ Certified Specialist in Workers’ Compensation Law, certified by the State Bar of California, Board of Legal Specialization ✦

Workers' Comp Lawyer in San Pedro, California

Certified Specialist (CA Bar)No Fee Unless We Win (Costs May Apply)Millions RecoveredSe Habla Español
Years of Practice
14+
Cases Handled
500+
over 14+ years of practice
Recovered
$7M+
over 14+ years of practice
Bilingual + Farsi
English + Español + Farsi

By Eman Yazdchi, Esq. · Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization · Cal Bar #285231

How do injuries actually happen to San Pedro workers across the 3-cluster port-trucking and longshore workforce?

San Pedro injuries cluster around port of los angeles longshore and terminal operations and the broader harbor area caseload pattern.

An injured San Pedro worker gets medical care, two-thirds wage replacement, a permanent disability rating, and a retraining voucher, regardless of fault or immigration status. Port of Los Angeles longshore and terminal operations, San Pedro fish-terminal and seafood-processing, and Harbor District construction drive the San Pedro workforce-injury profile and the cases the firm sees at the Los Angeles WCAB. Eman Yazdchi is a Certified Specialist in Workers' Compensation Law, certified by the California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California, and the firm handles San Pedro cases at the Los Angeles district.

San Pedro sits in Harbor Area; the workforce profile here is distinct from neighboring cities, San Pedro's Harbor-area workforce carries a meaningful Spanish-speaking share, which shapes the bilingual practice the firm runs on every San Pedro file. Many San Pedro workers also live or work near Wilmington and adjacent Los Angeles County markets, so cases routinely span the broader Harbor Area corridor.

What does California workers' compensation provide an injured San Pedro worker?

California provides medical care, two-thirds wage replacement, a permanent disability rating, and a retraining voucher for every injured San Pedro worker.

Under California Labor Code §3600, California workers' compensation is no-fault: an injured San Pedro worker receives benefits without proving the employer was negligent, only that the injury arose out of and in the course of employment. Under California Labor Code §3351, coverage reaches every worker in California regardless of immigration status. The Port of LA terminals, San Pedro Fish Market, Harbor Boulevard hospitality, and Western Avenue retail workforce all qualify. This page sits within our broader California workers' compensation lawyer practice.

What medical care and wage benefits is an injured San Pedro worker entitled to?

Under California Labor Code §4600, the employer must provide all medical treatment reasonably required to cure or relieve the injury, at no cost to the worker. The injured worker reports the injury in writing within 30 days under California Labor Code §5400. The employer must provide a DWC-1 within one working day under California Labor Code §5401, and up to $10,000 in immediate treatment is owed within one day under California Labor Code §5402(c). Temporary total disability under California Labor Code §4653 pays two-thirds of average weekly earnings, with late payments penalized under California Labor Code §4650. Permanent disability indemnity under California Labor Code §4660 and the §4659 life-pension award follow when the rating is high enough. A denied San Pedro workers' comp claim reopens at the WCAB once an application is filed.

What §5500.5 protection covers the San Pedro longshore cumulative-trauma allocation workforce?

San Pedro's port-trucking and longshore workforce gets specific §5500.5 protection on top of the general no-fault rule.

Under California Labor Code §5500.5, liability for a cumulative-trauma injury is allocated across the last year of injurious exposure to the employers and insurers responsible during that period. For San Pedro port-trucking and longshore workers, and specifically for longshore cumulative trauma, the §5500.5 doctrine is the lever that distributes the indemnity across multiple ports, terminals, or platforms a worker rotated through in the final year before the §5412 discovery date. The doctrine pairs with California Labor Code §3208.1 (the cumulative-trauma definition) and California Labor Code §5412 (the discovery-date rule) to create the analytic framework every San Pedro repetitive-motion claim runs on.

How are San Pedro permanent disability and §4663 apportionment defended?

The permanent disability rating runs on AMA Guides 5th-Edition Whole Person Impairment, adjusted for occupation and age; §4663 apportionment is the insurer's main reduction lever.

Under California Labor Code §4660, permanent disability is built on a WPI percentage per the AMA Guides 5th Edition, adjusted for occupation and age. A San Pedro port-trucking and longshore worker carries a heavier-duty occupational variant than an office colleague with the same diagnosis. A single-level lumbar fusion in a 45-year-old San Pedro worker commonly rates 40%–65%; catastrophic injuries crossing 70% trigger a life-pension award under California Labor Code §4659. Apportionment under California Labor Code §4663 is the insurer's main lever, when the insurer assigns 50% of the rating to a pre-existing condition the indemnity is halved. The defense work on apportionment is the bulk of the San Pedro settlement preparation at the Los Angeles WCAB.

Per the DIR's 2025 statutory adjustment, the maximum Supplemental Job Displacement Benefit voucher under California Labor Code §4658.7 remains at $6,000, a cap that has not been adjusted since the 2013 SB 863 reform, so its real value has eroded roughly 27% against the CPI. The voucher pays for retraining when the employer cannot offer modified or alternate work meeting the §4658.7(b) criteria.

How are San Pedro cumulative trauma and date-of-injury defended?

San Pedro cumulative trauma runs on §3208.1 with the §5412 discovery date triggering the §5405 one-year clock, and §5500.5 allocates liability across the last year of injurious exposure.

Many San Pedro workers carry cumulative trauma claims under California Labor Code §3208.1, repetitive-motion injuries built over months or years of port-trucking and longshore work. The date of injury under California Labor Code §5412 runs from the moment the worker knew or should have known the disability was industrial. The California Labor Code §5405 one-year statute of limitations runs from that discovery date, not from when the worker first felt symptoms. When more than one employer contributed during the injury period, California Labor Code §5500.5 allocates the liability across the last year of injurious exposure, a critical doctrine on the San Pedro workforce that often changes employers or platforms across a single trauma window.

The San Pedro appeal track runs from the WCAB district through Reconsideration under California Labor Code §5903 (20 days for a written petition, 25 by mail) and a Writ of Review under California Labor Code §5950 (45 days to the California Court of Appeal).

How are San Pedro retaliation and §132a discrimination handled?

A San Pedro worker fired, demoted, or pressured after filing a claim recovers reinstatement, lost wages, a 50% increase on the award up to $10,000, and costs under §132a.

California San Pedro workers' comp retaliation is prohibited under California Labor Code §132a. The remedy: reinstatement, lost wages, a 50% increase on the underlying workers' comp award up to $10,000, and costs. California Labor Code §244 reinforces the rule by treating immigration-status threats as retaliation, and California Labor Code §1102.5 layers a parallel whistleblower remedy when the worker reported a safety violation before the discharge. The San Pedro port of la terminals workforce that loses its job after a claim has one year from the discriminatory act to file a Petition for Discrimination at the WCAB. California Labor Code §5811 ensures a qualified Spanish-language interpreter at every WCAB hearing at no cost to the worker.

Injured at work? Call (661) 273-1780

Tap to call →

What local resources should an injured San Pedro worker know about?

San Pedro cases are heard at the Los Angeles WCAB; common claims involve port of los angeles longshore and terminal operations and the broader harbor area workforce.

Which WCAB district hears San Pedro workers' comp cases?

San Pedro workers' compensation files are routed under the DWC's EAMS venue rules to the Los Angeles district at 320 West 4th Street, Los Angeles, CA 90013. Yazdchi Law appears at the Los Angeles WCAB regularly on longshore cumulative trauma, California Labor Code §2810 / California Labor Code §2750.5 misclassification disputes, California Labor Code §4553 serious-and-willful petitions, California Labor Code §5811 Spanish-interpreter rights, and California Labor Code §132a / California Labor Code §244 retaliation petitions. The Division of Workers' Compensation sets the procedural rules and operates the WCAB districts. Related: the broader Los Angeles workforce-injury caseload runs through the LA district WCAB.

Where are the main San Pedro workforce risk zones?

  • Port of Los Angeles Outer Harbor and Berth 100 terminal-operations workforce
  • San Pedro Fish Market and adjacent seafood-processing crews along the waterfront
  • Harbor Boulevard hospitality and tourist-service spine
  • Western Avenue retail and small-business corridor
  • Gaffey Street and Pacific Avenue residential-services and rental-maintenance workforce

How San Pedro workers' comp cases have historically resolved at Yazdchi Law

A San Pedro port of la terminals worker with a confirmed single-level lumbar fusion, defended against apportionment under California Labor Code §4663, has settled in past Yazdchi Law cases in the $80,000–$200,000 range in permanent-disability indemnity plus future medical care under California Labor Code §4600 and a Supplemental Job Displacement Benefit voucher under California Labor Code §4658.7. Catastrophic-injury cases crossing the 70% permanent-disability threshold trigger a life-pension award under California Labor Code §4659. Every case is fact-specific; past results do not predict future outcomes, and the actual San Pedro settlement runs on the medical-legal evidence, occupational variant, age, and apportionment defense particular to that file.

Related San Pedro coverage and adjacent Los Angeles County pages

Frequently Asked Questions

What does a San Pedro workers' comp lawyer cost? Do I pay anything upfront?

Workers' compensation attorney fees in California are contingent and set by the WCAB under California Labor Code §4906, typically 15% of the settlement or award. A San Pedro port of la terminals worker pays nothing upfront, and the fee is paid out of the settlement only if the case recovers. The fee is reviewed and approved by the workers' compensation judge before any disbursement. Free initial case evaluation. Certified Specialist Eman Yazdchi (California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California).

How does an injured San Pedro worker file a workers' comp claim?

An injured San Pedro worker reports the injury to the employer in writing within 30 days under California Labor Code §5400, the employer provides a DWC-1 claim form within one working day under California Labor Code §5401, and up to $10,000 in immediate medical care is owed within one day under California Labor Code §5402(c). If the employer denies the claim within 90 days under California Labor Code §5402(b), the worker files an Application for Adjudication at the Los Angeles WCAB. Yazdchi Law handles the DWC-1 through trial and appeal under §5903 and §5950.

How much is a San Pedro workers' comp claim worth?

A San Pedro claim's value is built on the permanent disability rating under California Labor Code §4660 (WPI percentage from the AMA Guides 5th Edition, adjusted for occupation and age), the temporary disability paid during recovery under California Labor Code §4653, future medical care under California Labor Code §4600, the Supplemental Job Displacement Benefit voucher under California Labor Code §4658.7 (max $6,000), and the §4663 apportionment defense. A single-level lumbar fusion in a San Pedro port-trucking and longshore worker commonly rates 40%–65%; catastrophic injuries crossing 70% trigger a life-pension award under California Labor Code §4659. The San Pedro settlement page walks through the C&R vs Stipulations choice.

How long does an injured San Pedro worker have to file a workers' comp claim?

A California worker generally has one year from the date of injury to file a claim under California Labor Code §5405. For cumulative trauma claims under California Labor Code §3208.1, the date of injury runs from the §5412 discovery date, when the worker knew or should have known the disability was industrial, and the §5405 clock runs from that date, not from when the worker first felt symptoms. San Pedro port-trucking and longshore workers carrying repetitive-motion injuries often discover the industrial cause years after the symptoms started.

What protection does §5500.5 give a San Pedro longshore cumulative trauma worker?

Under California Labor Code §5500.5, liability for a cumulative-trauma claim is allocated across the last year of injurious exposure. For a San Pedro port-trucking and longshore worker who rotated through multiple employers, common across port of la terminals workforces, the §5500.5 doctrine distributes the indemnity across each employer and insurer responsible during that final year. It pairs with California Labor Code §3208.1 (cumulative-trauma definition) and California Labor Code §5412 (discovery-date rule).

What if the San Pedro employer retaliates after the injury claim?

California workers' compensation retaliation is prohibited under California Labor Code §132a. The remedy: reinstatement, lost wages, a 50% increase on the underlying workers' comp award up to $10,000, and costs. California Labor Code §244 reinforces the rule by treating immigration-status threats as retaliation, regardless of immigration status. A San Pedro port of la terminals worker fired or demoted after filing has one year to file a Petition for Discrimination at the Los Angeles WCAB. The full San Pedro retaliation framework covers the §132a / §244 / §1102.5 stack and the strict one-year deadline.

Last reviewed by Eman Yazdchi, Esq., June 2026.

Get your case evaluated in 60 seconds.

Get Your Free Case Evaluation

Talk to a Certified Specialist

Three fields. No obligation.

What Our Clients Say

Eman by far exceeds the basic requirements other lawyers give to clients and surpasses all expectations.

Briana Norman

Eman really knows his stuff and we were very pleased with our end result.

Myretta & Thomas Knorr

Eman by far exceeds the basic requirements other lawyers give to clients and surpasses all expectations.

Briana N.
Read more testimonials →