A reported $249,000 settlement to a crossing guard injured on the job shows how a single failure to yield can become both a workers’ compensation issue and a third-party personal injury claim under California law.
Crossing guards stand in the most exposed position on the street. They direct traffic in school zones, manage pedestrian flow, and trust drivers to follow signals and signs. When a driver fails to yield or misses a stop, the impact can be catastrophic.
Injuries on the job usually trigger workers’ compensation. But when the injury was caused by a third party (a driver who is not the employer), the worker may also have a separate civil claim against that driver and any available insurance.
A $249,000 settlement is not a sticker price for any crossing guard injury. The number reflects the specific facts: injury severity, time out of work, future care needs, available insurance, fault clarity, and the willingness of both sides to resolve the case.
Two cases with the same headline injury can settle for very different amounts. The detail that moves numbers is the documented evidence of fault, treatment, and lasting impact. A clean fault story with a strong medical record produces a different result than a disputed fault story with thin records.
Report the incident through your employer immediately to open the workers’ compensation file. Get medical care, follow the treatment plan, and document symptoms in writing. Save the police report number, witness contacts, and any video that captured the impact.
If the driver is identified, do not give the driver’s insurance a recorded statement before getting legal advice. Recorded statements are often used to push fault onto the pedestrian or minimize the injury.
Scranton Law Firm reviews third-party injury claims for workers across Northern California, including school zone and crossing guard cases.