I had a marijuana medical card. It’s expired and I no longer use marijuana as a treatment. What can I do to still get or work forwards getting my private pilots license. Has anyone gone thru this and succeeded. Any advice would be appreciated.
Unknown about dealing with the Marijuana part....
But I suggest that before you start spending money any flight training, you get your medical certificate sorted.
The medical history of the FAA 8500-8 application will be requiring you to provide details about the condition that caused you to include marijuana as part of your treatment.
Whatever that was, head back to the doctor who was treating you and obtain copies of your chart that has the details of what ailment was diagnosed and when, how and when it was treated, and what/when was the final outcome. If you are truly "cured", then a statement from the doctor saying "I am no longer following Mr. Guest Student for ______" may be needed.
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Additional tips... Do not, repeat
DO NOT go to the Aviation Medical Examiner's office for a medical exam and hand over the confirmation code that appears at the bottom of the application. Cut this off with scissors and keep in your pocket.
Keeping the code in your pocket allows the AME to review your application, and conduct the physical exam in a
consultative mode. While in this mode,
nothing goes to the FAA, and all information remains between you and the AME. Also during this mode the AME can discuss your application, the chances of successful submission, what is needed to proceed. Again, all of this is kept confidential from the FAA. But only if you keep that code in your pocket.
When you hand over the code, the AME opens your file in the FAA system and the exam is no longer confidential. It becomes "live". Once live, the only results are issue, defer, or deny.
Issue means you leave the office with the desired result of medical certificate in hand.
Defer means your situation requires the AME to send your submission to Oklahoma City for the FAA main office to render judgement. This can take 6-12 weeks before you get an answer, and the answer can be "okay we can issue", "need more information and you have a deadline to get it to us", or Denied.
Denial means you do not meet the standards and your dream of powered flight is pretty much cooked.... forever.
You do not want denial.
How do you avoid denial? Do not submit, or go live, your medical application until you are 100% sure you will pass "go" on the first attempt.
How do you make that happen? Keep the confirmation number in your pocket and remain "confidential consultation" mode until the AME says you have brought all items that are required and he can issue your medical certificate on the spot.