Patient: Closing Medical Marijuana Dispensary Would be a 'Disaster'

Jacob Bell

New Member
Kenneth Mandeville, 60, has degenerative disc disease and walks with a cane. His condition, he said, sends pain down his legs all the time that feels like "fire ants."

Mandeville, of Albion, was among around a half dozen medical marijuana patients who stopped by People's Choice Alternative Medicine Thursday morning across the street from Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor.

An AnnArbor.com reporter sat in the lobby for an hour and a half to talk to patients about their choice to get marijuana from the dispensary.

People's Choice partners say they operate a non-profit that takes donations for services and doesn't sell medical marijuana. A Michigan Court of Appeals ruling on Aug. 23 made the sale of marijuana at dispensaries illegal in the eyes of the state. The establishments can be shut down under a state public nuisance law, according to state Attorney General Bill Scheutte. Ann Arbor is reviewing a new zoning and licensing process in light of the court's ruling.

Mandeville said he takes medical marijuana for migraines and the leg pain.

Ingesting marijuana that's baked or cooked into food "really takes the pain away – for two or three days," he said. "I use less of my prescription pain medicine."

Dispensaries began popping up in Ann Arbor and across the state after the Michigan Medical Marihuana Act went into effect in April 2009. The law sets up a system under which patients can grow marijuana for themselves or have a state-registered caregiver do it for them

Mandeville said he doesn't grow plants for himself because he travels. He said a friend agreed to become a state-designated caregiver for him, doesn't know how to grow marijuana, so he hasn't been able to obtain medical marijuana that way. That's why he comes to the dispensary.

Mark Pelton, 56, is retired engineer who lives in Canton. He drives to Ann Arbor for medical marijuana, which he said helps him deal with severe leg pain from a ruptured disk. When not taking marijuana he can't stand up straight, he said.

Painkillers he took previously for his back made him too foggy-headed to work and ripped up his stomach, he said.

Of marijuana, he said, "I could eat and concentrate. It also helps me sleep."

A prescription sleep aid left him groggy the next day, he said, but that's not the case with marijuana.

He doesn't grow marijuana at home because his grandchildren live with him. He said it isn't easy to find a caregiver and that there don't seem to be enough of them.

"This place is what saves my life. It caters to older people," he said. "Taking it away will be a disaster."

Others who came through the doors Thursday included a 20-year-old unemployed man from Ann Arbor who declined to provide a name. He said restless leg syndrome gives him painful leg spasms and that marijuana addresses the pain and helps him to sleep at night. A 44-year old man from Milford said he is a stay-at-home dad and on disability for rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis and fibromyalgia. He said he has battled addictions to painkillers in the past and is currently on a medication to treat that addiction. He's taken marijuana for three months, he said.

On marijuana, "I feel better," he said. "I don't feel great, but I certainly feel better."

He said caregivers are hard to find and he doesn't want to grow marijuana at home around his children.

The dispensary where he and others obtain marijuana is being forced to move since receiving cease-and-desist letters from the city of Ann Arbor. Harry Cayce, a business partner with People's Choice, called neighbor complaints outlined in the letters "mythological."

The complaints include reports of alleged drug deals in the vicinity of the business, loud music and the location operating after business hours.

Cayce said some neighbors call police when workers take breaks to smoke cigarettes outside, and that they tell police customers are loitering when passersby are just sitting at a nearby bus stop. When a man down the street parked his car to smoke marijuana and drink, then threw the bottle outside at 11 p.m., neighbors blamed the dispensary. The incident was not related, according to dispensary partners.

The city attorney has a different story.

"We have discussed this matter with neighbors," City Attorney Stephen Postema said. "They had serious concerns."

"They are not allowed to be open. Period," he added. "Our zoning doesn't allow them in that area. The law makes clear that they are not allowed to operate in the manner that they're operating in."

The city is reviewing new zoning and licensing requirements in light of the appeals court ruling. Some dispensaries around Ann Arbor closed doors this week following raids on two dispensaries last week. Other dispensaries are still operating.

Cayce said the complaints from neighbors are ironic in a neighborhood that endures thousands of drunken football fans every time the University of Michigan has a home game.

"We're not dope dealers; we're medicine men, and we're here to help people who are sick," he said.

The bank-owned property is in the process of evicting the dispensary. Cayce said the business plans to move soon after the holiday weekend.

"We don't want to piss anyone off," he said. "We'll move. That's not an issue. It's just been difficult to find a place in the zoning with a landlord that was agreeable."

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News Hawk- Jacob Ebel 420 MAGAZINE
Source: annarbor.com
Author: Juliana Keeping
Contact: Contact Us
Copyright: AnnArbor.com LLC
Website: Patient: Closing medical marijuana dispensary would be a 'disaster'
 
If enough good citizens would call, write or show some solidarity of support for medicinal marijuana dispensaries, perhaps the powers that be would bend to the will of the people or rewrite the zoning laws to accommodate medical uses for marijuana. I would not be surprised if the majority of complainants were giving knee jerk reactions to the presence of the dispensaries. The tide of public opinion will eventually change. That is inevitable. The sooner the better!
 
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