Pubdate: Thu, 16 Jul 2009 Source: Union, The (Grass Valley, CA) Copyright: 2009 The Union Contact: http://apps.theunion.com/utils/forms/lettertoeditor/ Website: http://www.theunion.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/957 Author: Dave Moller, Staff Writer MEDI-POT PATIENT AIMS TO OPEN GRASS VALLEY DISPENSARY If you had to pick a marijuana user out of a crowd, Carole Chapman is probably the last person you would select. The south county grandma is always dressed as if she was still selling high-end retail clothing, one of her past professions, along with operating her own art and clothing business. Now Chapman wants to open a marijuana dispensary in Grass Valley and is advocating full legalization and taxation of pot through a drive to get it on the state ballot called the Tax Cannabis 2010 California Ballot Initiative. Prohibition has never worked — imagine trying to stop alcohol," Chapman said. "This is an herb that grows easily, it's insane. People would rather buy it legally than go to some guy on the corner," Chapman said. "I'm just trying to put a little ray of sanity into the picture." Like many Baby Boomers, Chapman smoked marijuana in the 1960s and then grew out of it. Like others who have resumed pot consumption, Chapman was reintroduced to cannabis by pain. About 10 years ago, "I had carpal tunnel syndrome, bursitis and lower back pain," while living in San Francisco, Chapman said. "I was in physical therapy and they would give me pills for pain and I just couldn't take them because they just wiped me out." Neighbors were talking about medicinal marijuana in conversations and pointed out to her that a dispensary had just opened down the street. She got a prescription and has been treating her pain ever since with smokable and edible marijuana products she buys mostly in Sacramento and San Francisco. Chapman didn't know there was a marijuana dispensary in Colfax after she moved here several years ago, but even the knowledge of it hasn't deterred her from wanting one in Nevada County. We're a little behind the times up here, but now it's time," Chapman said. The hopeful entrepreneur attended Oaksterdam University in Oakland, where legal marijuana guru Richard Lee teaches students how to run a medical marijuana nonprofit collective and "everything you need to know about cannabis," Chapman said. At the marijuana dispensaries she visits, Chapman has learned to ask for the Indica strain as opposed to the Sativa strain of marijuana. Indica effectively reduces her pain and joint swelling, she said. It really helps with insomnia," Chapman said. "Take a toke of Indica at night and you're out, and you might even get some technicolor dreams." Chapman says she doesn't use marijuana recreationally. I'm not trying to con anybody," she said. "It's medicine and I need it." Although her daughter briefly ate medical marijuana products while undergoing chemotherapy for cancer, family members do not use now and understand her need, Chapman said. When she was still struggling with her pain, Chapman asked the Kaiser health system to give her medical marijuana before turning to the neighborhood dispensary. They laughed," Chapman said. "Now they're not laughing, everybody's for it." The 56 percent vote for Prop. 215 in 1996 that established legal medical marijuana indicates that people will vote for full legalization in 2010 in California, Chapman said. In a year or two its going to be legal, just like Amsterdam," Chapman said. "They know it's coming. Nobody wants to pay taxes, but we want the schools, fire departments and roads," Chapman said. Taxing legal marijuana through the proposed initiative would provide an alternative revenue source for government, she added. In the interim, Chapman has taken out a business license with Grass Valley for a medical marijuana dispensary. I envision a medical-style office up by the hospital with plenty of parking and handicapped access," Chapman said. "You'd have to have somebody to greet (patients), I'd probably hire two." For now, Chapman awaits the city's proposed medical marijuana ordinance, expected to be complete late this summer. I want to see if I qualify," Chapman said. "I would offer a discount to vets, older and disabled people." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr