San Leandro, California

Wrongful Termination Lawyer in San Leandro

California wrongful termination representation for San Leandro workers. Free, confidential consultation. We represent employees only, never employers.

San Leandro wrongful termination cases are pursued under California's broad employment-protection framework, including FEHA (Government Code section 12940), Title VII, and Labor Code sections 1102.5/6310. Strict filing deadlines apply: CRD 3 years; EEOC 300 days. We represent employees only, never employers. Free confidential consultation.

What Is Wrongful Termination in San Leandro

California is an at-will state, but the at-will rule has many exceptions. The leading case is Tameny v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (1980) 27 Cal.3d 167, which established the public-policy tort: an employee fired for refusing to commit an illegal act, for asserting a statutory right, or for reporting illegal conduct can sue in tort. Other San Leandro wrongful-termination grounds include FEHA (Cal. Government Code section 12940), Labor Code section 1102.5 (whistleblower retaliation), Labor Code section 6310 (Cal/OSHA retaliation), Labor Code section 232 (wage-discussion retaliation), and Labor Code section 132a (workers' compensation retaliation).

San Leandro Industries Where Wrongful Termination Claims Are Most Common

  • Healthcare workers at Kaiser Permanente San Leandro Medical Center - at Kaiser Permanente San Leandro Medical Center (2500 Merced Street, San Leandro, CA 94577 - 216 licensed beds per HCAI; 38 bassinets; 182 acute-care beds and 148 ICU beds per Leapfrog Group; 434,000-square-foot main hospital plus a 275,000-square-foot medical office building; HCAI ID 106014337; opened to replace the former Kaiser Hayward Medical Center). Covered by SB 525 healthcare-worker minimum-wage schedule (Cal. Labor Code sections 1182.14, 1182.15, 1182.16), California Health & Safety Code section 1278.5 ($25,000-per-violation civil penalty for patient-safety retaliation), and CNA / SEIU-UHW / NUHW collective bargaining agreements. NUHW (National Union of Healthcare Workers) is headquartered in nearby Emeryville/Oakland and has won precedent-setting cases against Kaiser.
  • Chocolate manufacturing and food-production workers at Ghirardelli - at the Ghirardelli Chocolate Company manufacturing facility (founded 1852; manufacturing relocated from San Francisco to San Leandro in the 1960s; acquired by Swiss-based Lindt & Sprüngli in 1998 but operates as a separate brand headquartered in San Leandro). Food-manufacturing workers are covered by IWC Wage Order 1 (manufacturing), Cal/OSHA standards for food-processing equipment (8 CCR section 4350 et seq.), federal Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) protections, and the federal False Claims Act for food-fraud reporting (31 U.S.C. sections 3729-3733).
  • Beverage manufacturing and distribution workers at Reyes Coca-Cola Bottling - at Reyes Coca-Cola Bottling (a major San Leandro Coca-Cola bottler/distributor). Covered by IWC Wage Order 1 (manufacturing) for bottling operations and Wage Order 9 (transportation) for distribution drivers; Teamsters Local 853 collective bargaining agreement may apply; federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (49 C.F.R. Parts 350-399) for commercial drivers; federal STAA whistleblower (49 U.S.C. section 31105) for commercial-vehicle safety reporting.
  • K-12 education workers at SLUSD - at the San Leandro Unified School District / SLUSD (TK-12 comprehensive program and adult school across 13 campuses). Covered by California Education Code sections 44930-44987 (permanent-employee dismissal protections), the Educational Employment Relations Act (EERA / Cal. Gov. Code sections 3540-3549.3), Cal. Education Code section 44113 (school-employee whistleblower protections), and CTA-affiliated collective bargaining agreements. PEPRA and the 6-month government-claim deadline apply.
  • City of San Leandro government and public-safety workers - at the City of San Leandro (835 East 14th Street, (510) 577-3351 - charter city since the June 6, 1978 special municipal election (effective November 6, 1978); council-manager form of government with a seven-member City Council elected by district plus a directly-elected Mayor), the San Leandro Police Department, and the San Leandro Fire Department. Police covered by POBR (Cal. Gov. Code section 3300 et seq.); firefighters by FBOR (Cal. Gov. Code section 3250 et seq.); all public employees by PEPRA, MMBA (Cal. Gov. Code sections 3500-3511), and the 6-month Government Claims Act deadline (Gov. Code section 911.2).
  • Light-industrial, warehouse, and logistics workers - at the industrial corridors along Marina Boulevard, Doolittle Drive, Davis Street, and Williams Street, plus the Oakland International Airport vicinity (just north of San Leandro). Warehouse workers are protected by the Warehouse Quotas Act (AB 701, Cal. Labor Code sections 2100-2112) - which requires written quota disclosures, prohibits undisclosed quotas, and prohibits quotas that prevent compliance with meal/rest breaks or OSHA.
  • Retail, restaurant, and consumer-services workers - at the Bayfair Center mall, along East 14th Street, and at chain retailers throughout San Leandro. Fast-food workers at chains with 60+ national locations earn the $20.00/hour AB 1228 floor (Cal. Labor Code section 1474). Retail workers covered by IWC Wage Order 7 (mercantile industry).
  • Maritime and waterfront workers at the San Leandro Marina and nearby Oakland Port operations - at the San Leandro Marina and at Oakland Port-area logistics operations (San Leandro is on the eastern shore of San Francisco Bay just south of the Port of Oakland). Maritime workers are protected by the Longshore and Harbor Workers' Compensation Act (33 U.S.C. section 901 et seq. / LHWCA) and the Jones Act (46 U.S.C. section 30104) for injuries occurring on or near navigable waters; whistleblower protections include 46 U.S.C. section 2114 (seamen).

San Leandro Mass-Layoff Notice Rights

If you were part of a San Leandro mass layoff, the California WARN Act (California Labor Code sections 1400 through 1408) requires covered employers with 75 or more workers to give 60 days' advance written notice of a mass layoff of 50 or more employees in any 30-day period, a plant closing, or a relocation. Federal WARN (29 U.S.C. sections 2101-2109) applies to employers with 100+ employees. Damages: up to 60 days of back pay and benefits, plus an additional civil penalty of up to $500 per day under federal WARN if notice is not given to the local government. SB 617 (effective January 1, 2026) expanded the required notice content.

California Law

For the full California framework, including Tameny, Labor Code section 1102.5, FEHA, Cal-WARN, and public-employee due-process rights, see our California employment law page.

What Compensation Can You Recover

Back pay, front pay (or reinstatement where appropriate), emotional-distress damages, punitive damages (unlimited under FEHA and under the Tameny tort), 60-day Cal-WARN back-pay damages where applicable, and attorneys' fees and costs (Cal. Government Code section 12965(c); Labor Code section 1102.5(j)). For details, see our California employment law page.

How to File a Wrongful Termination Claim in San Leandro

FEHA charges go to the California Civil Rights Department (CRD), Oakland Office, 1515 Clay Street, Suite 701, Oakland, CA 94612. Federal charges go to the EEOC Oakland Local Office, 1301 Clay Street, Suite 1170-North, Oakland, CA 94612. Whistleblower and wage claims can be filed with the California Labor Commissioner (DLSE Oakland Office, 1515 Clay Street, Room 401, Oakland, CA 94612). Civil suits are heard at the Alameda County Superior Court - Hayward Hall of Justice, 24405 Amador Street, Hayward, CA 94544, (510) 670-5048 (the closest civil courthouse to San Leandro; the Juvenile Justice Center is located in San Leandro itself at 2500 Fairmont Drive, Suite C3013). Call us at 1-800-371-3088 before any deadline.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a Tameny claim and does it apply to San Leandro workers? +
Tameny v. Atlantic Richfield Co. (1980) 27 Cal.3d 167 recognized a tort cause of action for termination in violation of fundamental public policy. {city_name} workers can pursue Tameny claims for terminations violating constitutional, statutory, or regulatory public policy (e.g., refusing to commit perjury, reporting illegal activity, exercising statutory rights).
Is California an at-will state? What does that mean for San Leandro workers? +
California Labor Code section 2922 establishes at-will employment as the default, either party may end the relationship at any time. But at-will does not permit termination for an unlawful reason: discrimination, retaliation, exercising statutory rights, refusing to commit unlawful acts, or violation of public policy.
Can a worker sue if a worker was fired for taking protected leave (FMLA / CFRA / PDL) in San Leandro? +
Yes. FMLA (29 U.S.C. section 2615), CFRA (Government Code section 12945.2), and PDL (Government Code section 12945) prohibit interference with leave rights and retaliation for taking protected leave. Damages include reinstatement, back pay, front pay, liquidated damages (FMLA), and attorneys' fees.
What's the deadline for a San Leandro wrongful-termination lawsuit? +
Tameny: 2 years (Code Civ. Proc. section 335.1, personal-injury statute applied by Mathieu v. Norrell Corp.); FEHA: 3 years for CRD complaint, 1 year to sue after right-to-sue notice; Labor Code section 1102.5: 3 years; public-employer Government Claims Act: 6 months.

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Legal Disclaimer: This page is provided for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Employment law is complex and fact-specific. The information on this page reflects California law as of 2026 and may change. If you believe your rights have been violated, please consult a licensed California employment attorney to evaluate your specific situation.