Pubdate: Tue, 24 May 2011 Source: Petoskey News-Review (MI) Copyright: 2011 Petoskey News-Review Contact: http://www.petoskeynews.net/forms/lettertotheeditor.html Website: http://www.petoskeynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/4115 Author: Chris Engle, Staff Writer CHOICE COLLECTIVE FOUNDER: POT 'A VIABLE ALTERNATIVE' TO PAIN DRUGS GAYLORD - Choice Collective co-owner Drew Driver said he felt "obligated" to open the medical marijuana facility because of the relief he's gotten as an illicit - and now legal - medical cannabis user. Along with his longtime friend and co-owner, Ricky Weber, Driver hopes to provide the same relief to other legal medical marijuana cardholders. Opened April 20 inside a renovated building at 611 N. Center Ave. in Gaylord, the collective connects registered patients for member patient-to-patient transfers. Currently, Driver said the collective has 75 members, some of whom rent lockers to store their marijuana. Driver said Michigan's Medical Marihuana Act allows for such transfers, and the collective makes its money through compensation for its service providing a "public, secure atmosphere" for patients to meet. No marijuana is consumed on the premises, cardholders set their own prices, typically $10 to $18 per gram, and Driver said locker fees are "extremely low." Sitting behind a glass-top office desk in a fresh and neatly-decorated room, Driver exudes a professional, casual businessman persona one may not associate with a place where glass pipes sit in a corner display case, and where a faint aroma of pot occasionally floats through the room to a Grateful Dead tune over the speakers. "We're not in it to make money," Driver said. "We're here to prove that (medical marijuana) works and that it is a viable alternative to prescription medications." For Driver, marijuana is a very real alternative. Nine years ago, a quick swerve to miss a deer crossing Peanut Hill Road put Driver in the hospital for three months. His injuries from the accident were extensive - numerous fractured vertebrae, broken femur, hips, pelvis and ribs, and other internal injuries. During rehabilitation at Mayo Clinic, Driver was prescribed Marinol - synthetic THC, one of several active chemicals in cannabis - to ease the nausea caused by other prescriptions he was taking. It worked. "It was through that I realized this had real medical uses," he said. Driver continued to use marijuana illegally to manage the pain from his injuries until he could legally do so as a registered patient. Though he still needs crutches to stand and walk, he medicates daily with nothing other than pot, which also controls the muscle spasms in his legs which would otherwise keep him awake at night. In July last year, Driver and Weber, who is also a cardholder, decided to open the collective. They renovated a building that hadn't been used for four years, hired Weber's mom, Valerie, as an employee and committed themselves to "doing it right," meeting with community leaders prior to opening. "We wanted to know we had the community behind us before we made the investment," Driver said, noting requests from city officials to be discreet with their signage and to install a security system. "He was real receptive," Gaylord City Police Chief Joe FitzGerald said of Driver's consideration of the city's requests. "He's trying to do everything by the letter of the law." Since opening, the collective has become a member of the Gaylord Area Chamber of Commerce. Driver also is willing to give tours of the facility to non-cardholders before and after hours, but the facility is open to cardholders only during business hours, 10 a.m.-7 p.m., Monday through Saturday. For more information, call the collective at 448-8298. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard R Smith Jr.