Pubdate: Fri, 08 Jul 2011 Source: Ann Arbor Journal (MI) Copyright: 2011 Journal Register Company Contact: http://www.heritagenews.com/lettertoeditor/ Website: http://heritage.com/ann_arbor_journal/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/5167 Author: James David Dickson Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/topic/Dispensaries THE PEOPLE YOU MEET AT THE PEOPLE'S CHOICE DISPENSARY People's Choice Alternative Medicine sort of blends in with the rest of South Main Street. Literally a 30-second stumble from Michigan Stadium, off of West Keech at 1054 South Main, the space is better identified to drivers and passersby for the white "Chiropractor 1054 Parking" sign outside than for what happens inside. That's exactly what co-owner Harry Cayce wants, which is why, despite the fact that People's Choice serves dozens upon dozens of customers a day, you won't smell even a whiff of marijuana coming from the building, won't see a bong loaded on the front porch on your way to Michigan football games this fall or a smoke-themed "alternative tailgate" in its drive way. Alternative medicine, in this case, is medical marijuana and its derivatives. For the last 14 months People's Choice has been serving Ann Arbor's medical marijuana patients. Membership in People's Choice has eclipsed 2,500 patients. Cayce said that businesses like People's Choice operate in a grey area of the medical marijuana law - the law Michigan's voters passed in 2008 never explaineed how legally-recognized patients were to find pot - and operate under the assumption they can serve any duly registered medical marijuana patient. At the door, customers present their medical marijuana cards and state ID. And, as has become standard practice in Ann Arbor, People's Choice also allows patients whose checks have been cashed by the state's medical marijuana program 21 days prior. The state has a 6-month backlog on issuing medical marijuana cards. Chelsea Henry: The "budtender" God Bud. 734. Scherezade. Purple Kush. Sugar Bush. With a supply that changes daily, it can be tough for a patient to keep up with what's good. But Chelsea Henry, the self-described "budtender" of People's Choice, customers often find that a good match is a short conversation away. In a 90-minute period Henry served 6 customers, including one caregiver who was resupplying for her and her husband's patients. Henry makes it her business to know what ails each customer and what each customer responds to. If a customer buys a bag, tries it, comes back and says "meh," she'll take back the remainder back for either a cash refund or an exchange. Henry started nine months ago. She's not smoking right now, for her own reasons, but continues to serve a broad customer base: the ex-cop and war veteran, the 22 year-old former grappler who blew out his knee before he could get a college scholarship, the pregnant caregiver who can't smoke herself but has patients to serve, the philosophy professor who believes the federal prohibition on marijuana is a ploy to prop up the cancer-care industry. Henry listens to all of them carefully. When it's a regular stopping in, she becomes the pot equivalent of the bartender who knows your favorite and has it ready before your back hits the chair. Roger: The ex-cop The ex-cop wasn't having much luck tracking down the pot. Roger was among the 58 percent of voting-age Michiganders who voted yes on medical marijuana in November 2008. But he was still resorting to calling up his daughter's boyfriend and sheepishly steering the conversation toward marijuana when the beau simply suggested that Roger, a Vietnam vet and former officer with the Detroit and Inkster police forces, get legal and get his medical marijuana card. Roger took the advice. Roger asked that the Ann Arbor Journal not print his last name because marijuana is still illegal at the federal level. That prohibition means that the decisions of Ann Arbor's voters in 2004 and Michigan's voters in 2008 to allow for medical marijuana would provide no recourse if a U.S. president, now or in the future, directed the Justice Department to ramp up the war on pot. Roger, who suffered a gunshot wound as a police officer and suffers from chronic pain, said he prefers marijuana to the Vicodin and Oxycontin doctors have prescribed him in the past; it's more fun and offers less risk of addiction. He prefers smoking a joint to drinking alcohol and voted for the right to make that choice. "It's pretty hard to abuse marijuana," Roger said. Michigan's medical marijuana law has taken the trade off the streets and into storefronts like People's Choice, and brought people like Roger in from the cold. And from the doctor's office. There is no official tally on how many awkward conversations the law has prevented. For massage therapist Mary Dettling, it's alternative healing If there is one person who might have little to fear if the law kicks in the doors at People's Choice, it is massage therapist Mary Dettling. Dettling has been with People's Choice for about three months. She came on at a time the dispensary was looking to expand its offerings beyond pot and its derivatives, which at People's Choice include pizza and ice cream. "At first, they wanted to contract with the Relax Station," where Dettling also works, she recalled. "But I stepped up and said I'd like to do it." Dettling's massages are free to members for the first five minutes, then a dollar a minute afterwards. Dettling, of Manchester, offers Swedish massage but isn't doing full-body yet and everyone keeps their clothes on in her office. Dettling also suffers from fibromyalgia and is a medical marijuana patient. Budtender Henry normally steers customers toward their taste in marijuana, but some people, like Dettling, are always on the lookout for something new. Co-owner Harry Cayce: A tough balancing act To operate a marijuana dispensary in Michigan is to operate in a constant grey area. Actually, it might not be that grey. Attorney General Bill Schutte has published an opinion that dispensaries are illegal in Michigan. Taken together, those facts mean that the plug could be pulled on the entire People's Choice operation tomorrow. Or the next day. Or a year from now. Even so Cayce feels his duty to patients outweighs the risk. Said Cayce, "Every day we open our doors is an act of civil disobedience." But with upwards of 2,500 members to serve, patients suffering from all manner of health conditions from chronic pain to Crohn's Disease to cancer, Cayce, who works with growers and caregivers to keep his shelves stocked, said he needs to operate as if People's Choice will be around another 50 years. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom