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

Woodland Hills Workers' Compensation Retaliation Attorney

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

What retaliation rights do Woodland Hills workers have after filing a workers' comp claim?

Woodland Hills retaliation claims arise when an employer fires, demotes, or punishes a worker for filing a comp claim, protected by the state's anti-retaliation statute.

A Woodland Hills worker fired or demoted after filing a workers' comp claim is entitled to reinstatement, lost wages, an increased award up to $10,000, and the right to keep all medical, disability, and voucher benefits already owed. The same protection covers Westfield Topanga, Warner Center office, Kaiser Woodland Hills, and Ventura Boulevard retail staff. Certified Specialist Eman Yazdchi (California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California) files at WCAB Van Nuys.

Woodland Hills sits in San Fernando Valley, West SFV corporate / Warner Center hub, and most local claims are venued at the WCAB Van Nuys district office. California protects Woodland Hills workers from two distinct forms of post-injury retaliation: Labor Code §132a, discrimination, discharge, or threatened discharge because the employee filed (or even intended to file) a workers' comp claim, and Labor Code §3550, the employer's failure to post the required notice of workers' comp coverage and rights. The §132a petition is filed at the WCAB Van Nuys office, has a one-year statute that runs from the discriminatory act, and asks for a 50% increase in compensation up to $10,000, reinstatement, and lost wages. We pair the §132a petition in Woodland Hills with parallel FEHA disability-discrimination analysis where it fits.

## How a Woodland Hills workers' compensation retaliation claim works A Woodland Hills workers' compensation retaliation claim is brought under two distinct Labor Code provisions, §132a and §3550, and a Certified Specialist (California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California) in Workers' Compensation Law analyzes both on day one. **Labor Code §132a, anti-retaliation for filing a claim.** Section 132a makes it unlawful for any California employer to discharge, threaten to discharge, or in any manner discriminate against an employee because the employee has filed (or stated an intention to file) a workers' compensation claim, has received a rating, award, or settlement, or has testified in a workers' compensation proceeding. A §132a petition is filed at the WCAB Van Nuys office and the remedies are statutory: a 50% increase in workers' compensation benefits up to $10,000, reinstatement, and reimbursement of lost wages and work benefits caused by the discrimination. The Lauher v. WCAB and Department of Rehabilitation v. WCAB line of cases governs the substantive framework, the worker has to show adverse action causally connected to a workers' comp activity, after which the burden shifts to the employer to show a business necessity. **Labor Code §3550, notice posting.** Section 3550 requires every California employer to post and keep posted in a conspicuous place at every place of employment a notice setting out the workers' compensation rights of injured workers, and to provide written notice to each employee. A §3550 violation is a misdemeanor under §3700.5 and is independently actionable. In Woodland Hills, a §3550 violation is frequently paired with a §132a petition because a non-posting employer is often the same employer that retaliates. **The one-year statute under §132a.** A §132a petition has to be filed within one year from the discriminatory act, not from the date of injury. In Woodland Hills cases the discriminatory act is most often a post-RTW termination, a demotion after a claim filing, or a refusal to provide modified duty consistent with the treating physician's work restrictions. **Why the §132a/§3550 pairing matters.** A §132a petition is litigated inside the WCAB and produces statutory remedies. A parallel FEHA disability-discrimination claim, when the facts support it, is litigated in superior court and produces tort remedies. A Certified Specialist (California Board of Legal Specialization, State Bar of California) evaluates both tracks at intake. **Local context.** California DWC 2024 program data documents continued §132a petition volume statewide, and WCIRB 2024 data shows persistent post-injury employment-separation patterns across litigated claims, meaning §132a/§3550 retaliation pressure in Woodland Hills is real and the one-year clock is real. We protect Woodland Hills clients at WCAB Van Nuys.

Related on yazdchilaw.com: California §132a workers' comp retaliation pillar · Windsor Hills workers' comp retaliation · Baldwin Hills workers' comp retaliation · Woodland Hills denied workers' comp claim · California Labor Code §132a (workers' comp retaliation).

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## Woodland Hills workforce, employers, and local WCAB practice Most Woodland Hills workers' compensation matters are venued at the WCAB Van Nuys district office, and our case calendar reflects that. Woodland Hills is West SFV corporate / Warner Center hub, inside San Fernando Valley, and the local workforce mix shapes what kinds of retaliation claims we actually see. Woodland Hills is a West-SFV corporate hub anchored by Warner Center, major insurance carriers, financial-services back-offices, and tech employers. Claims out of Woodland Hills are heavy on cumulative-trauma carpal-tunnel, neck-and-shoulder ergonomic injuries, and stress claims tied to call-center and back-office work. When we take a Woodland Hills workers' comp case, we open the file at WCAB Van Nuys, calendar the relevant statutes, run the §4663 apportionment analysis early, and tell the client, in plain English, what the realistic outcome looks like. Call (661) 273-1780.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Labor Code §132a, and how does it apply in Woodland Hills?

Labor Code §132a makes it unlawful for any California employer to discharge, threaten to discharge, or in any manner discriminate against an employee because the employee has filed (or stated an intention to file) a workers' compensation claim, has received a rating, award, or settlement, or has testified in a workers' compensation proceeding. A §132a petition is filed at WCAB Van Nuys with a one-year statute from the discriminatory act, and the remedies are statutory, a 50% increase in workers' compensation benefits up to $10,000, reinstatement, and reimbursement of lost wages and work benefits.

How long do I have to file a §132a petition in a Woodland Hills case?

A §132a petition has to be filed within one year from the discriminatory act, not from the date of injury. In Woodland Hills cases the discriminatory act is most often a post-RTW termination, a demotion after a claim filing, or a refusal to provide modified duty consistent with the treating physician's work restrictions. The one-year statute is strictly enforced, there is no equitable-tolling savings clause in the statute.

What is Labor Code §3550?

Labor Code §3550 requires every California employer to post and keep posted in a conspicuous place at every place of employment a notice setting out the workers' compensation rights of injured workers, and to provide written notice to each employee. A §3550 violation is a misdemeanor under §3700.5 and is independently actionable. In Woodland Hills, a §3550 violation is frequently paired with a §132a petition because a non-posting employer is often the same employer that retaliates against an injured worker.

Can I sue my Woodland Hills employer in superior court for workers' comp retaliation?

A §132a petition stays inside the WCAB. A parallel FEHA disability-discrimination claim, when the facts support it, is filed in superior court and carries tort remedies, emotional distress, punitive damages where the statute allows, and attorney fees. The two tracks address different things, and a Certified Specialist evaluates both at intake so a Woodland Hills client is not boxed into the WCAB remedy when superior-court remedies are available.

What does §132a actually pay if I win in Woodland Hills?

Section 132a's statutory remedy is a 50% increase in the worker's compensation benefits up to $10,000, plus reinstatement to the employee's former position, plus reimbursement of lost wages and work benefits caused by the discrimination. The statutory cap on the 50%-increase remedy is what makes the parallel FEHA track important, FEHA carries no such cap. A Certified Specialist runs both numbers when evaluating a Woodland Hills retaliation case.

How do I prove §132a retaliation in a Woodland Hills case?

The framework runs through Lauher v. WCAB and Department of Rehabilitation v. WCAB. The worker has to show (1) an industrial injury, (2) adverse employment action, and (3) a causal connection between the workers' comp activity and the adverse action. Once that prima facie case is made, the burden shifts to the employer to show a legitimate, non-discriminatory business necessity. Direct evidence (post-claim discharge, post-modified-duty-request demotion) is rare; circumstantial evidence carries most Woodland Hills §132a cases.

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

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