Vallejo Workers’ Compensation Lawyer
If you were injured while working in Vallejo, you may have the right to workers’ compensation benefits under California law. These benefits can help pay for medical treatment, replace part of your lost wages, and provide support if your injury causes lasting impairment. But getting benefits is not always simple. Insurance companies may delay treatment, deny parts of the claim, dispute whether the injury is work-related, or pressure you to return to work before you are ready.
Anderson Franco Law helps injured workers in Vallejo and throughout the Bay Area. We represent workers with serious job injuries, denied claims, delayed medical treatment, disability disputes, and cases where a work injury may also involve a separate third-party personal injury claim.
Vallejo workers face injury risks in many different settings. People work in healthcare, construction, transportation, delivery, public works, retail, restaurants, maritime-related jobs, industrial work, warehouses, maintenance, education, security, and service jobs. Mare Island is also an important part of Vallejo’s work history and economy. The City of Vallejo describes Mare Island as the nation’s first naval station on the West Coast, and today it is home to more than 100 businesses, Touro University, residential areas, trails, and ongoing redevelopment.
Workers’ Compensation Representation for Vallejo Workers
California workers’ compensation is supposed to protect employees who are injured on the job. In most cases, you do not need to prove your employer did something wrong. If your injury happened because of your work, you may have a valid claim.
But that does not mean the process is easy. Insurance companies and claims administrators often control the pace of the case. They may decide which doctors you see, whether treatment is approved, when temporary disability checks are paid, and whether your injury is accepted or denied.
That can put injured workers in a difficult position. You may know you are hurt. You may know the injury happened at work. But the insurance company may still delay care, question your symptoms, or minimize your disability.
A Vallejo workers’ compensation lawyer can help protect your rights, challenge unfair delays, and make sure the claim is handled seriously.
What Workers’ Compensation Benefits May Cover
Workers’ compensation benefits depend on the injury, medical evidence, work restrictions, and whether the injury causes temporary or permanent disability.
Depending on your case, benefits may include:
- Medical treatment for the work injury
- Temporary disability payments if you cannot work while recovering
- Permanent disability benefits if the injury causes lasting impairment
- Supplemental job displacement benefits if you cannot return to your usual job
- Mileage reimbursement for medical appointments
- Death benefits for certain surviving family members after a fatal work injury
The California Division of Workers’ Compensation explains that workers’ compensation benefits may include medical care, temporary disability, permanent disability, supplemental job displacement benefits, and death benefits.
Common Work Injuries in Vallejo
Work injuries in Vallejo can happen in one sudden accident or develop over time. A worker may hurt their back lifting equipment. A delivery driver may suffer a neck injury in a crash. A healthcare worker may develop shoulder and back pain from patient handling. A construction worker may injure a knee, shoulder, or spine. A retail worker may fall on a wet floor.
Common Vallejo work injuries include:
- Back injuries from lifting, carrying, pushing, or pulling
- Neck injuries from crashes, falls, or repetitive strain
- Shoulder injuries from lifting, reaching, or overhead work
- Knee injuries from falls, kneeling, climbing, or twisting
- Hand, wrist, and elbow injuries from repetitive tasks
- Foot and ankle injuries from slips, trips, falls, and uneven surfaces
- Head injuries and concussions
- Burns and chemical exposure injuries
- Crush injuries involving equipment, vehicles, machinery, or heavy materials
- Respiratory injuries from workplace exposure
- Psychological injuries after traumatic work events
- Aggravation of preexisting medical conditions
A work injury does not need to happen in a dramatic accident to be serious. Many workers suffer real injuries from repetitive tasks, awkward movements, long shifts, heavy lifting, or years of physically demanding work.
Vallejo Workers Who May Need Legal Help
Any employee can suffer a job injury. Some Vallejo workers face higher injury risks because their jobs require lifting, driving, standing, climbing, repetitive motion, or exposure to dangerous conditions.
We help workers in jobs such as:
- Healthcare and caregiving
- Construction
- Maritime and industrial work
- Delivery driving
- Trucking and transportation
- Warehouse and logistics work
- Retail and grocery work
- Restaurant and food service
- Public works and field work
- School and education support jobs
- Security work
- Landscaping
- Maintenance and janitorial work
- Office and administrative work
You do not need to have a traditionally dangerous job to have a valid workers’ compensation claim. The key question is whether your work caused or contributed to your injury.
What To Do After a Work Injury in Vallejo
After a work injury, your health comes first. Get medical care right away if needed. You should also take steps to protect your workers’ compensation claim.
You should:
- Report the injury to your employer as soon as possible
- Report the injury in writing when possible
- Ask for a DWC-1 claim form
- Write down how the injury happened
- Identify witnesses
- Tell the doctor the injury is work-related
- Follow your work restrictions
- Keep copies of medical notes and claim paperwork
- Save texts, emails, wage records, and insurance letters
- Speak with a lawyer if treatment or checks are delayed
California’s Division of Workers’ Compensation warns that if you do not report your injury within 30 days, you could lose your right to workers’ compensation benefits.
The DWC-1 Claim Form
The DWC-1 claim form is important because it formally starts the workers’ compensation claim. Telling a supervisor that you got hurt may not be enough by itself.
After you report a work injury, your employer should provide the DWC-1 claim form. You complete the employee section, keep a copy, and return it to your employer.
California’s DWC claim form explains that within one working day after the claim form is filed, the employer must complete its section, provide a dated copy, keep one copy, and send one to the claims administrator.
If your employer refuses to give you the form, delays the process, or tells you not to file a claim, you should speak with a lawyer.
What Happens After You File a Workers’ Compensation Claim?
After the claim form is submitted, the insurance company investigates whether to accept or deny the claim. During that period, problems may come up quickly.
The insurance company may:
- Accept one body part but deny another
- Delay medical treatment
- Send you to a doctor who minimizes your injury
- Dispute your work restrictions
- Stop temporary disability payments
- Claim the injury did not happen at work
- Blame a preexisting condition
- Offer a settlement before your condition is clear
California’s DWC explains that if a claim is not accepted or denied within 90 days after the completed claim form is given to the employer, the injury is presumed to be caused by work. DWC also states that up to $10,000 in treatment may be available under medical treatment guidelines while the claims administrator considers the claim.
That rule can help injured workers, but it does not mean the rest of the case will be easy. Disputes may still arise over medical treatment, disability payments, permanent impairment, future care, and settlement.
Medical Treatment in a Vallejo Workers’ Compensation Case
Medical treatment is often the most important part of a workers’ compensation case. Your medical records affect your work restrictions, temporary disability payments, permanent disability rating, future medical needs, and settlement value.
Insurance companies may delay or deny treatment requests. They may send you to a doctor in their network. They may use utilization review to deny care. They may argue that treatment is not reasonable or necessary.
Those delays can hurt your recovery. They can also affect the value of your claim.
Anderson Franco Law helps injured workers address treatment disputes and understand what options may be available when care is delayed or denied.
Temporary Disability Benefits
Temporary disability benefits may apply when your work injury prevents you from doing your job while you recover. These benefits are meant to replace part of your lost wages when you cannot work or when your employer cannot accommodate your restrictions.
Temporary disability disputes often arise when:
- The doctor takes you off work
- Your employer claims modified work is available
- The insurance company delays checks
- The insurer stops payments without explanation
- Your restrictions change
- The insurance company claims the disability is not work-related
If your checks are late, missing, or calculated incorrectly, the issue should be addressed quickly. Wage replacement benefits can be critical for injured workers and their families.
Permanent Disability Benefits
Permanent disability benefits may apply if your injury causes lasting impairment after your condition reaches maximum medical improvement. The amount depends on medical reporting, impairment ratings, apportionment, your occupation, your age, and other workers’ compensation factors.
Insurance companies often try to reduce permanent disability by arguing that part of your condition came from age, degeneration, a prior injury, or a non-work-related condition. These arguments can significantly affect the value of a case.
A lawyer can review the medical reporting and help determine whether the permanent disability evaluation appears fair.
Supplemental Job Displacement Benefits
If your work injury leaves you unable to return to your usual job, you may qualify for a supplemental job displacement benefit. This issue often matters when a worker can no longer safely perform physically demanding work.
A construction worker, caregiver, delivery driver, warehouse worker, maintenance worker, or industrial worker may need to think carefully about future job options before resolving the claim.
Workers’ Compensation and Third-Party Claims
Some Vallejo work injuries involve more than workers’ compensation. If someone other than your employer caused your injury, you may also have a separate personal injury claim.
This is called a third-party claim.
Examples include:
- A delivery driver hit by another driver while working
- A worker injured in a crash on I-80, Highway 29, Highway 37, or I-780
- A construction worker injured by a subcontractor
- A maintenance worker hurt on property controlled by another company
- A worker injured by defective equipment
- A security worker injured because of negligent property management
- A driver injured while traveling for work
- A worker hurt at a jobsite controlled by another company
This distinction matters because workers’ compensation usually does not pay for pain and suffering. A third-party personal injury claim may allow recovery for damages that workers’ compensation does not cover.
Anderson Franco Law looks for third-party claims early. In the right case, that issue can make a major difference in the worker’s total recovery.
When You Should Call a Workers’ Compensation Lawyer
Not every minor work injury requires a lawyer. But you should strongly consider legal help if the injury is serious or the insurance company is making the process difficult.
You should speak with a lawyer if:
- Your claim is denied
- Medical treatment is delayed or denied
- You are not receiving disability checks
- Your employer says the injury did not happen at work
- The insurance company blames a preexisting condition
- You are being pushed back to work too soon
- You cannot return to your usual job
- You may have permanent disability
- You are offered a settlement before you understand your future medical needs
- Someone other than your employer may have caused the injury
A lawyer can help protect the claim, challenge denials, evaluate medical reporting, and determine whether you may have both a workers’ compensation claim and a personal injury claim.
Where Vallejo Workers’ Compensation Cases Are Handled
If a Vallejo workers’ compensation case becomes disputed, the matter may proceed through California’s Division of Workers’ Compensation district office system. DWC explains that its district offices, sometimes called WCABs, provide judicial services to help resolve disputes in workers’ compensation claims, and workers’ compensation judges make decisions in those cases.
If your case becomes disputed, your lawyer may need to file documents, appear at hearings, address medical-legal issues, negotiate settlement, or prepare for trial before a workers’ compensation judge.
Why Hire Anderson Franco Law
Anderson Franco Law helps injured workers with serious work injuries, denied claims, delayed treatment, disability disputes, and third-party work injury cases.
Anderson Franco previously worked on the insurance-defense side. That experience helps the firm understand how insurance companies evaluate claims, what they look for in medical records, and how they try to reduce payouts.
When we handle a Vallejo workers’ compensation case, we look closely at:
- How the injury happened
- Whether the claim was properly reported
- Whether the insurance company accepted or denied the claim
- Whether medical treatment is being delayed
- Whether disability checks are being paid correctly
- Whether permanent disability may apply
- Whether the worker can return to their usual job
- Whether a third-party personal injury claim exists
- Whether settlement should include future medical care
The goal is not just to process paperwork. The goal is to protect the worker’s medical care, wage benefits, and long-term recovery.
Serving Injured Workers Throughout Vallejo
Anderson Franco Law represents injured workers throughout Vallejo, including downtown Vallejo, Mare Island, Glen Cove, Hiddenbrooke, East Vallejo, North Vallejo, South Vallejo, the Waterfront, Vallejo Heights, Steffan Manor, Country Club Crest, and areas near I-80, I-780, Highway 29, Highway 37, Tennessee Street, Sonoma Boulevard, Columbus Parkway, Georgia Street, Springs Road, and Mare Island Causeway.
We also represent injured workers throughout Solano County and the greater Bay Area.
Speak With a Vallejo Workers’ Compensation Lawyer
If you were injured at work in Vallejo, contact Anderson Franco Law for a free consultation. We can review what happened, explain your options, and help you understand whether you may have a workers’ compensation claim, a third-party personal injury claim, or both.
You pay no attorney’s fees unless we recover benefits or compensation for you.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I have a workers’ compensation claim in Vallejo?
You may have a workers’ compensation claim in Vallejo if your injury or illness was caused by your work. The injury may come from one accident, repeated job duties, driving, lifting, falling, exposure, or another work-related cause.
Do I need to prove my employer was at fault?
You usually do not need to prove your employer was at fault. California workers’ compensation is generally a no-fault system. The main issue is whether the injury arose out of and occurred in the course of employment.
How long do I have to report a work injury?
You should report a work injury as soon as possible. California’s Division of Workers’ Compensation warns that you could lose your right to benefits if you do not report the injury within 30 days.
What if my employer does not give me a DWC-1 form?
If your employer does not give you a DWC-1 form, document your request and consider speaking with a lawyer. The DWC-1 form is important because it formally starts the workers’ compensation claim process.
What if my workers’ compensation claim is denied?
If your workers’ compensation claim is denied, the case may not be over. You may be able to challenge the denial through the workers’ compensation system, obtain medical-legal evaluation, and present evidence showing the injury was work-related.
Can I choose my own doctor?
Whether you can choose your own doctor depends on the facts, including whether your employer uses a medical provider network and whether you predesignated a doctor before the injury. If treatment is being delayed or controlled unfairly, you should speak with a lawyer about your options.
What if I was injured while driving for work?
If you were injured while driving for work, you may have a workers’ compensation claim. If another driver caused the crash, you may also have a third-party personal injury claim against that driver. Both claims should be evaluated.
Can I sue my employer for a work injury?
In most cases, workers’ compensation is the exclusive remedy against your employer for a job injury. However, you may have a separate personal injury claim if someone other than your employer caused the injury.
What is a third-party work injury claim?
A third-party work injury claim is a personal injury claim against someone other than your employer. For example, if another driver hit you while you were driving for work, you may have both a workers’ compensation claim and a personal injury claim.
What if the insurance company says my injury is preexisting?
If the insurance company says your injury is preexisting, that does not automatically defeat your claim. Many workers have prior pain, prior injuries, or age-related changes. The issue is whether your work caused a new injury, aggravated a prior condition, or increased your need for treatment.
How much does it cost to hire Anderson Franco Law?
It costs nothing upfront to hire Anderson Franco Law for a Vallejo workers’ compensation case. The firm works on a contingency fee, which means attorney’s fees are paid only if benefits or compensation are recovered for you.










