Bristol, Virginia Workers Compensation Lawyer
Bristol Workers Compensation Attorney Serving Southwest Virginia
A Bristol workers compensation lawyer represents injured employees whose claims are filed with the Virginia Workers Compensation Commission and heard at the Abingdon or Wytheville regional offices. If you were hurt at work in Bristol, Washington County, or anywhere in Southwest Virginia, you may be entitled to medical benefits, wage replacement, and permanent disability compensation – all tax-free and regardless of fault.
The Insurance Company Has a Plan for Your Claim. You Need a Better One.
By Corey Pollard | Virginia Workers Compensation Attorney
You didn’t plan to get hurt at work.
You showed up. Did your job. Then something went wrong – a fall, a defective machine, a blown disc, a car accident or truck crash on I-81 – and suddenly you’re searching for a workers comp lawyer in Bristol at 11 p.m. because nobody at your employer’s insurance company will return your phone calls or authorize your medical appointments.
I’ve seen this hundreds of times.
The adjuster was friendly at first. Maybe they approved some treatment. Maybe they sent a few wage loss checks. Then the delays started. The denials. The pressure to come back to work before your doctor clears you.
This isn’t an accident. It’s a strategy.
Insurance companies don’t make money paying claims. They make money denying them, delaying them, and settling them for less than they’re worth.
You need someone who knows how to make them pay and do what the law says they must. That’s what I do.
I’ve represented injured workers across Virginia for more than a decade, including workers throughout Southwest Virginia whose cases are heard at the Virginia Workers Compensation Commission offices in Abingdon and Wytheville. I’ve recovered more than $100 million in benefits and settlements.
This page explains your rights, the challenges Bristol workers face, and when hiring a lawyer makes the difference.
Short on Time? (Bristol Work Injuries)
If you’re in a rush, here’s what Bristol-area workers need to know:
-
- Your hearing will likely be in Abingdon or Wytheville – not Richmond. I travel to you.
-
- If the insurance company asks for a recorded statement, you can decline. I almost always recommend turning down the request.
-
- If your doctor recommends treatment and the insurer delays or denies it, document everything.
-
- If you’re being pressured to return before you’re ready, that decision can permanently affect your benefits and your body.
-
- Bristol-area claims often involve industrial injuries, mining, and logistics – insurers defend these aggressively because they’re often catastrophic injuries that are expensive.
A 10-minute call can tell you whether you need a lawyer now or can safely wait: (804) 251-1620.
Why Bristol Workers Face Unique Challenges
Bristol sits at a crossroads – literally. I-81 runs through it. Manufacturing, mining, healthcare, and logistics all converge here.
These industries built this region. They also break bodies. And when you get hurt, the insurance company’s job is to minimize what they pay you.
Claims from this region often involve:
-
- Heavy machinery and industrial equipment
- Employees who have spent their lives doing manual labor and will have trouble transferring their job skills to a new industry
- Work-related vehicle crashes
- Occupational diseases from exposure to hazardous work environments
- Complex causation disputes
Insurance companies know these cases are expensive. They defend them aggressively.
Recent Bristol-Area Result
A utility technician at a Bristol-area facility suffered a lumbar spine injury requiring surgical repair and the implantation of a spinal cord stimulator. The insurer initially denied the claim, arguing the condition was degenerative. We litigated the case, obtaining a medical opinion linking the injury to a specific work incident, and secured surgical and spinal cord stimulator authorization.
Industries That Shape Bristol’s Workforce – And Its Injuries
Mining & Energy
Alpha Metallurgical Resources is headquartered in the Bristol area, with mining operations across Central Appalachia. It runs surface mining operations at the 88 Strip and underground mining operations at Deep Mine 41, Deep Mine 44, and No. 10 (Bear Ridge Upper Banner). Coal mining remains one of the most dangerous occupations in Virginia.
I’ve represented miners whose insurers blamed breathing problems on smoking instead of decades underground. Black lung claims require specialized medical evidence – chest X-rays graded by certified B-readers, pulmonary function tests, and occupational histories that prove exposure duration. Miss one element and the claim fails.
The Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) tracks the data. I’ve represented the workers behind it.
Manufacturing
Bristol’s manufacturing base exposes workers to serious hazards. Large manufacturing employers in the area include the following:
-
- Strongwell Corporation – Fiberglass reinforced polymer production
- Universal Fibers – Synthetic fiber manufacturing
- Electro-Mechanical Corporation – Industrial and electrical equipment
- Shearer’s Foods – Snack food manufacturing
The types of jobs at manufacturing facilities can produce amputations, rotator cuff tears, spinal injuries requiring fusion, and cumulative trauma that ends careers.
Healthcare
Bristol Regional Medical Center, part of Ballad Health, employs thousands across the Tri-Cities region.
Nurses, aides, and technicians suffer back injuries, knee injuries, needlestick incidents, and work-related PTSD.
I helped expand PTSD coverage for Virginia first responders through appellate litigation. That precedent – and the legal framework we established – matters for healthcare workers experiencing trauma from workplace violence, code situations, or repeated exposure to death and suffering
Retail, Distribution & Logistics
The I-81 corridor makes Bristol a logistics hub:’
-
- Walmart – Retail and distribution
- UPS – Package handling and transportation
- K-VA-T Food Stores (Food City) – Regional distribution and retail
Slip and falls, overexertion injuries, and vehicle crashes are common. When a third party causes the wreck, you may have two claims – workers comp and a negligence lawsuit.
Employer not listed? I handle claims against employers of all sizes throughout Southwest Virginia.
Who You’re Up Against
When your claim gets denied or your benefits stop, it’s not a mistake. Your employer’s insurance company has lawyers. They may include some of the largest defense firms in Virginia:
-
- Penn Stuart – Headquartered in Abingdon. The largest firm between Roanoke and Knoxville. Defends workers comp and federal black lung claims.
-
- KPM Law – Roanoke and Richmond offices. Defends employers and insurers statewide.
-
- Lucas & Kite – Roanoke. Exclusively workers comp defense statewide.
-
- Midkiff, Muncie & Ross – Richmond-based. Defends insurance carriers, self-insured employers, and black lung claims.
-
- Goodman Allen Donnelly – Offices in Richmond, Charlottesville, and Norfolk. Represents insurance carriers and employers.
These firms employ dozens of attorneys whose job is to minimize or deny your claim. They know every defense, every delay tactic, every way to pressure you into settling for less.
I’ve gone head-to-head with each of these firms – in depositions, at hearings, and in settlement negotiations. I know which adjusters dig in and which ones settle when the evidence is strong. That intelligence matters when we’re building your case strategy.
I know how they operate. I started my career on the defense side. Now I use that knowledge to help injured workers.
Common Workplace Injuries in Bristol
Traumatic Injuries
Falls, machinery accidents, vehicle crashes, and mining incidents can cause:
-
- Traumatic brain injury
- Spinal cord damage
- Severe fractures
- Burns and crush injuries
The dispute during workers comp litigation is typically over surgery authorization, impairment ratings, and settlement value.
Fights About Whether the Injury Resulted from Repetitive Stress & Cumulative Trauma
Many injuries can result from a work incident being the final straw for a weakened body part:
-
- Carpal tunnel syndrome
- Meniscus tears
- Degenerative disc disease accelerated by work
Insurance companies claim these conditions are “just aging” or pre-existing. Beating that defense requires medical evidence connecting your work to your condition.
Occupational Diseases
Virginia covers occupational diseases including coal workers’ pneumoconiosis (black lung), occupational hearing loss, and asbestos-related conditions like mesothelioma and asbestosis.
These claims follow different legal standards than traumatic injuries. The statute of limitations runs from diagnosis or when you reasonably should have known the disease was work-related – not from your last day of exposure. Miss that deadline or fail to establish causation through qualified medical evidence, and you lose. No exceptions.
The Bristol Workers Comp Process
Step 1: Report the Injury
Report within 30 days – but same-day written notice is best. Here’s a sample letter you can adapt.
Request the panel of physicians immediately. In Southwest Virginia, some panel doctors have reputations for being conservative on causation and surgical necessity. If you’re choosing from a panel and aren’t sure, call me before you pick. A bad panel choice can haunt your claim for years.
Step 2: The Insurance Investigation
The adjuster will call. They’ll sound helpful.
Don’t be fooled. They work for the insurance company.
If they ask for a recorded statement, you can decline. I recommend it.
Step 3: Acceptance or Denial
If accepted, you’ll receive an Award Agreement. Review it carefully—or have me review it.
If denied, you can file a claim and request a hearing.
Bristol-area hearings occur in Abingdon or Wytheville. I’ve tried cases at both.
Step 4: Settlement
Settlement value depends on your compensation rate, permanent impairment, work restrictions, and future medical needs.
Some general rules. Don’t settle until you’ve reached maximum medical improvement. Don’t accept the first offer without knowing what you’re giving up.
But every rule has exceptions.
I’ve negotiated multiple seven-figure settlements. I don’t leave money on the table.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I have to travel to Richmond?
No. Hearings happen in Abingdon or Wytheville. I travel – you don’t have to.
What does a lawyer cost?
Nothing upfront. I work on contingency. Fees are capped at 20% and approved by the Commission.
Can I pick my own doctor?
You choose from the employer’s panel. Choose wisely.
What if my claim is denied?
Then we fight. Here’s what happens next.
What benefits am I entitled to?
Medical care (no co-pays, no caps), temporary total disability, temporary partial disability, permanent partial disability, and vocational rehabilitation. All tax-free.
How long do I have to file a workers comp claim in Virginia?
You must file a claim with the Virginia Workers’ Compensation Commission within two years of your accident – or within two years of your last compensation payment, whichever is later. For occupational diseases, the deadline runs from diagnosis or discovery. Missing this deadline usually means losing your claim entirely, so don’t wait to get legal advice
When to Call a Bristol Workers Comp Lawyer
Call if:
-
- Your claim was denied
- Benefits stopped unexpectedly
- Surgery was refused
- You’re being pressured to return too early
- You received a settlement offer and don’t know if it’s fair
- You have permanent restrictions preventing return to your old job
- The employer filed to terminate your benefits
Not sure? Call anyway. The consultation is free. I’ll tell you straight.
Why I Win Cases Others Don’t
I’ve been on the other side. Early in my career, I did insurance defense. I know how adjusters think and how defense attorneys prepare. I use that knowledge against them.
I’ve changed Virginia law. In Henrico County Public Schools v. Mack, Record No. 0635-24-2 (March 18, 2025), I argued before the Court of Appeals of Virginia that insurers must pay for permanent impairment evaluations -and won the case. That precedent now helps injured workers statewide, and it came from a case just like the ones I handle every day.
I’ve recovered over $100 million. Not because I’m lucky. Because I prepare every case like it’s going to trial.
Contact Corey Pollard Law
Call: (804) 251-1620
Email: cpollardjba@gmail.com
Office:
10800 Midlothian Turnpike, Suite 242
Richmond, VA 23235
I represent injured workers throughout Virginia – including Bristol, Abingdon, Wytheville, Marion, and all of Southwest Virginia.
Consultations are free. You pay nothing unless I win.
Schedule Your Free Consultation →
Additional Resources
From My Site:
Official Sources:
Last updated: December 2025
Disclaimer: This page provides general information about workers compensation in Virginia and is not legal advice. Every case depends on its specific facts. Contact an attorney to discuss your situation.