Pubdate: Fri, 27 May 2016 Source: Toronto Sun (CN ON) Page: 3 Copyright: 2016 Canoe Limited Partnership Contact: http://www.torontosun.com/letter-to-editor Website: http://torontosun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/457 Author: Michele Mandel MEDICAL POT USER DRIVEN ROUND BEND Medical Pot User Fighting For Driver's Licence Sam Slaughter is not a drug addict. He has repeatedly told them. His doctor has told them as well. And yet because he's legally prescribed medical marijuana to deal with chronic jaw pain, the Ministry of Transportation (MTO) has suspended Slaughter's driver's licence and refuses to reinstate it. He has to prove that he has been free of "illicit drugs" for a year or attend a drug treatment program; Until then, he can't drive. For a cabbie who earns his living by taxiing fares around Trenton, it has had disastrous consequences. "They're treating me like I was hammered doing 160 on the 401," says the exasperated Slaughter, 27. "I didn't do anything illegal. I simply disclosed that I have a prescription for marijuana. I don't take it before I operate a motor vehicle, that would be stupid. I have it at night so I can go to sleep." His jaw was broken in a bar fight about six years ago and he has suffered with pain ever since. Slaughter was originally prescribed powerful narcotics, which he argues are far more dangerous for someone who drives for a living. "I thought I was more of an addict when I was on morphine. It was making me a zombie. I just wanted to sleep all day," he says. "That's why I switched to marijuana." It relieved his discomfort while allowing him to get a restful sleep and function the next day. All was going well until last fall when he decided to apply for his commercial driver's licence so he could get into trucking. A nurse in his doctor's office made an error filling out his medical form - saying he used marijuana but didn't indicate that he had been prescribed the drug for pain. "It's just been craziness," Slaughter says. "It started as a mistake on the paperwork which initiated everything. But from there it's been a tailspin." He immediately notified MTO about the error and was told not to worry. Slaughter then received a "substance use assessment" to be filled out by his physician. It was completed and sent off. That still wasn't good enough. They wanted evidence he was free of illicit drugs or had attended rehab. He has sent them a copy of his legal prescription; his doctor has sent repeated letters to confirm Slaughter is a legal user of medicinal pot, not a dope addict. All to no avail. The MTO keeps sending the same form letter to say that they're still missing the information they've requested. The doctor's note isn't detailed enough. And on and on. "They're on a witch hunt," Slaughter complains. "It's a hidden agenda against people with medical marijuana licences." In April, despite all the correspondence, the MTO notified him that not only was he not getting his commercial licence, but they were yanking his driver's licence as well. He filed a complaint with the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario alleging discrimination due to his disability. "They're treating me like a drunk or a threat on the road when there is no evidence that anything like that is even remotely true," Slaughter wrote the tribunal. "Having a prescription for medical marijuana makes me ineligible to drive? I do not smoke and drive." The bureaucratic runaround has cost him his ability to earn a living. He's too proud to go on welfare and worries that he's going to be evicted soon. "I can't pay my hydro, the cupboards are getting pretty bare. It's been 38 days that I haven't been able to work because of this." Slaughter has given up on driving trucks. He's enlisted in the Canadian Forces and is provisionally approved as a weapons technician. They're just waiting for him to do his medical in Kingston - but he needs his licence back to drive there. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D