
Your employer just denied your disability leave request, and you’re panicking about how you’ll recover while keeping your job. That’s completely valid. The system can feel deliberately confusing, with vague rejection letters and HR departments that suddenly stop returning calls.
However, a denial doesn’t have to be final. California law may provide protections depending on whether the issue involves EDD disability benefits, job-protected leave, or workplace accommodation rights.
Shirazi Law Firm, P.C. has helped employees in your exact situation fight back successfully. Our Los Angeles disability attorneys will walk you through your options, from internal appeals to legal action, so you can make informed decisions about what comes next.
Most people don’t realize how many different disability leave programs exist in California. California workers may have separate rights under SDI for wage replacement, the California Family Rights Act (CFRA) or FMLA for job-protected leave, and FEHA for workplace accommodations.
If your disability-related leave was denied, the next steps depend on the type of claim involved. In California, EDD disability benefits, job-protected leave, and workplace accommodation rights are governed by different rules.
Common denial reasons?
Time is not your friend here.
The EDD appeal process generally requires you to file within 30 days of receiving your denial notice. Not 31 days. Not four weeks. Thirty days.
For Disability Insurance (DI) and Paid Family Leave (PFL) appeals, you’ll need form DE 1000A, while for Unemployment Insurance appeals, use form DE 1000M. However, a written letter explaining why you disagree with the denial also works.
What goes in your appeal?
Keep proof of mailing or submission and save copies of everything.
After filing, you’ll get a hearing date before an Administrative Law Judge. This isn’t as scary as it sounds, but it’s also not casual. The judge will review evidence, hear testimony, and make a binding decision. You can bring witnesses. Your doctor’s testimony carries significant weight.
And you can absolutely bring a lawyer to this hearing. Should you? Depends on the complexity, but representation often increases success rates.
This is where cases get won or lost.
Your hearing before an Administrative Law Judge follows specific procedures.
Preparation steps that actually matter:
The U.S. Department of Labor provides resources about hearing procedures and your rights during administrative proceedings, though California state hearings follow slightly different protocols than federal ones.
After a denial, talking to your employer gets complicated. You’re probably frustrated. Maybe scared about your job security. Perhaps dealing with financial stress because you’re not receiving benefits.
Stay professional anyway.
The interactive process under California law requires both parties to engage in good-faith discussions about reasonable accommodations. Your employer must participate. If they refuse, document that refusal because it strengthens any subsequent legal claims.
What does the interactive process actually look like?
This should be a collaborative problem-solving conversation, not an adversarial one.
Reasonable accommodations might include modified work schedules, reassignment to vacant positions, changes to workspace setup, or additional unpaid leave beyond what FMLA/CFRA requires. Employers don’t have to provide your preferred accommodation, but they can’t just refuse to discuss options.
If your employer violated leave laws or discriminated against you, file a complaint with the California Civil Rights Department (formerly DFEH). You have three years from the date of discrimination to file under FEHA, though acting sooner is always better. The CRD investigates and can pursue enforcement action or issue you a right-to-sue notice.
You’ve got 30 days to file an appeal from the date on your denial notice – seriously, don’t miss that deadline. Request a reconsideration or file for an appeal hearing. Your Los Angeles disability lawyer can help with this. Check the California EDD website for the specific forms and make sure you include any new medical evidence your doctor can provide.
File your appeal within 30 days using the EDD appeal form. You’ll need your denial notice, updated medical documentation from your healthcare provider, and any employment records that support your case. The California Civil Rights Department can help if your employer violated state leave laws during this process.
Form DE 1000A for Disability Insurance and Paid Family Leave appeals, or DE 1000M for Unemployment Insurance appeals. Download them directly from the EDD website. Instructions are right on the form itself.
EDD appeals typically take a few months for a decision. Employer disputes through CRD can vary significantly. If you need a faster resolution, sometimes negotiating directly with your employer or having an attorney send a demand letter speeds things up.
Don’t let a denial stop you. And understand this – employers count on workers giving up after the first “no.” We’ve seen countless cases where proper documentation and the right legal pressure changed everything. Act fast. California’s strict deadlines mean waiting could cost you the benefits you’ve earned and the protections you deserve.
Contact our firm today to review your denial and build your appeal strategy. Your disability leave rights are worth fighting for, and you don’t have to do it alone.