Pubdate: Tue, 01 Apr 2008 Source: Fort Collins Coloradoan (CO) Copyright: 2008 The Fort Collins Coloradoan Contact: http://www.coloradoan.com/customerservice/contactus.html Website: http://www.coloradoan.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1580 Author: Pat Ferrier Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) CITY TO GET MEDICAL POT STORE The city's first medical marijuana "store" plans to open Monday as part of a holistic healing center. James and Pam Fleming of Fort Collins are opening the EnerChi Healing Center, 1502 S. College Ave., above Repeat Boutique. The center will offer healing therapies ranging from kundalini yoga to ayurvedic medicine, hypnosis, nutrition, meditation, acupuncture and organic medical marijuana. Owner James Fleming said being able to provide medical marijuana to people with chronic pain, illness or other conditions is "incredibly important." "We're not out to be legal drug dealers," Fleming said. "Our whole emphasis is in holistically treating the individual, and medical marijuana is an integral part of how we do that." Fleming began using medical marijuana himself more than a year ago to deal with chronic asthma. "I was quite disappointed at how difficult it was to find quality medicine," he said. But the use of medical marijuana, he said, "completely changed my life." He hasn't used his inhaler for more than a year, and, other problems associated with extended steroid use from his inhalers "have done a complete 360," he said. Colorado voters legalized the medical use of marijuana in 2000 when they passed Amendment 20. Patients interested in medical marijuana must first get a doctor's prescription and a state-issued registration card with the name of their caregiver before they can legally grow, buy or use marijuana to relieve their symptoms. "We have to be very diligent in following the way the law is written as closely as possible," Fleming said. The couple serves as caregivers to about 10 patients, Fleming said, but he expects that to increase as word spreads. Fort Collins police said they were unaware of the new business, but as long as the Flemings comply with state law there is no problem. "If this grower is certified, then they can grow it for other legal users," aid Rita Davis, spokeswoman for Fort Collins Police Services. The Flemings plan to use proceeds from selling medical marijuana to help subsidize practitioners' salaries. According to plans, customers of EnerChi Healing Center can either buy a membership and pay a reduced rate for every visit or pay a per-visit rate. "The rates are much lower than market ... that's where medical marijuana would compensate," Fleming said. The cost of medical marijuana will be on a sliding scale, Fleming said, depending on the patients' specific needs. Medical marijuana came to the forefront in Fort Collins in 2006 when a local couple was arrested for growing and distributing pot. James and Lisa Masters maintained they were acting as caregivers and growing and distributing medical marijuana legally to patients in need. Prosecutors said that neither James nor Lisa Masters were medical marijuana patients at the time nor was there any documentation that they were serving as caregivers for other medical marijuana patients. The charges were eventually dropped after it was ruled the search of the Masters' home was illegal. "You have to remember in the Masters' case at the time the marijuana was confiscated, they did not have their legal certification. That came after the fact," Davis said. "If the grower is certified, then that process is legal." - --- MAP posted-by: Steve Heath