Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Changes To Gun Licensing System Set To Pass Before Commons Recess, Fall Election

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 May, 2015 02:11 PM
  • Changes To Gun Licensing System Set To Pass Before Commons Recess, Fall Election
OTTAWA — New Conservative legislation that changes the gun licensing system cleared a House of Commons committee last week and is on track to become law before the summer recess — and a likely fall election.
 
Bill C-42, dubbed the Common Sense Firearms Licensing Act, has drawn sharp criticism even within the sport-shooting community but nonetheless remains grist for Conservative get-out-the-vote efforts, especially in rural Canada.
 
Ian Avery, president of the Nova Scotia Federation of Anglers and Hunters, said that while "the rhetoric has died down quite a bit" around the gun control issue since the long-gun registry was abolished in 2012, it remains a top concern for the firearms community.
 
"It is still a vote-mover and it is still a vote-getter for the Conservative party," said Avery.
 
The latest legislation has had a somewhat rocky ride.
 
Introduced last Oct. 7, it was set to be debated in the Commons the day after a lone gunman shot dead a ceremonial guard at the National War Memorial and then stormed Parliament Hill, where he died in a hail of bullets.
 
Needless to say, it was not an opportune time for a government bill that relaxes some gun licensing measures.
 
The legislation was quietly resurrected late last month and rushed through committee, from which it emerged with only a single, minor housekeeping amendment on Wednesday.
 
The Conservative House leader's office says it expects the bill to become law before the summer recess, currently scheduled to begin June 24. An anticipated Oct. 19 election means any unpassed bills this spring will die on the order paper.
 
MP Robert Sopuck, the chair of the Conservative hunting and angling caucus, said he's heard the mixed reviews from gun owners but calls C-42 "a very good bill." 
 
"I think this helps the hunters out a lot," Sopuck said from his farm just south of Riding Mountain National Park in Manitoba.
 
The bill removes some of the paperwork and penalties for gun licensing and transportation, provides a six-month grace period for lapsed licenses, gives cabinet decision-making power over how guns are classified, makes mandatory gun prohibitions for violent offenders and domestic assaults, and makes it compulsory to pass a firearms course in order to be licensed.
 
The mixed bag of new measures has Sheldon Clare of the National Firearms Association concerned that the bill, in his words, in some sense increases gun control.
 
Gun control advocates, meanwhile, argue exactly the opposite, and are especially concerned about relaxed rules governing the transport of firearms and the ability of politicians to override the RCMP on decisions about which weapons should be restricted or prohibited.
 
"It's very small, picayune changes to the legislation, but they could have major impacts," said Wendy Cukier of the Coalition for Gun Control.
 
"The fact that it's being pushed through so quickly without consultation from experts should be really troubling to Canadians."
 
Greg Farrant, manager of government affairs and policy for the Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters, said there's huge interest in the firearms community over C-42, which he cautiously characterizes as the next step after killing the gun registry data.
 
"There's still a huge segment of the firearms community that thinks the government needs to go further," said Farrant, although his organization is not among them.
 
"Does it have the same cachet as the long-gun registry? Perhaps not. But there's still a very large undercurrent of firearms interest across the country in what's going on at the federal level."
 
Opposition MPs who vetted the bill say it is a naked political move by the Conservative government to put something fresh in the window for its gun-friendly constituency before going to the polls in October.
 
"They seem determined to jam it through before we rise," said NDP MP Randall Garrison. "They're clearly using it for political purposes."

MORE National ARTICLES

Police Charge Man In Deaths Of Young Brothers Who Were Asphyxiated By Python

Police Charge Man In Deaths Of Young Brothers Who Were Asphyxiated By Python
CAMPBELLTON, N.B. — Police in New Brunswick have charged a man with criminal negligence causing death after two young brothers were asphyxiated by a python.

Police Charge Man In Deaths Of Young Brothers Who Were Asphyxiated By Python

B.C. Auditor Rips Performance Of Government's $182 Million Computer System

B.C. Auditor Rips Performance Of Government's $182 Million Computer System
VICTORIA — The B.C. government has spent seven years and $182 million trying to modernize aging computer systems in the social services ministries, but the province's auditor general says only one-third of that goal has been achieved.

B.C. Auditor Rips Performance Of Government's $182 Million Computer System

Baby Boom Continues For Endangered J Pod Orcas With New Calf Spotted Off B.C.

Baby Boom Continues For Endangered J Pod Orcas With New Calf Spotted Off B.C.
GALIANO ISLAND, B.C. — Researchers say yet another baby has been born to an endangered population of orcas off British Columbia's coast.

Baby Boom Continues For Endangered J Pod Orcas With New Calf Spotted Off B.C.

Leaders' Personal Info Revealed In Australian G20 Summit Privacy Breach: Guardian

Leaders' Personal Info Revealed In Australian G20 Summit Privacy Breach: Guardian
TORONTO — A published report says personal details of world leaders attending last November's G20 summit in Australia were accidentally disclosed to the organizers of an Asian Cup soccer tournament.

Leaders' Personal Info Revealed In Australian G20 Summit Privacy Breach: Guardian

G20 Officer Committed Battery, Violated Rights Of Protester, Court Rules

G20 Officer Committed Battery, Violated Rights Of Protester, Court Rules
TORONTO — A police officer who gained widespread notoriety for telling a protester at the infamous G20 summit that "this ain't Canada right now" committed battery when he manhandled him, Ontario's top court has concluded.

G20 Officer Committed Battery, Violated Rights Of Protester, Court Rules

Britain's Celebrity Chef Jamie Oliver Expands Food Crusade To G20, Cites Diet Problems In Canada

Britain's Celebrity Chef Jamie Oliver Expands Food Crusade To G20, Cites Diet Problems In Canada
OTTAWA — Jamie Oliver, Britain's celebrity chef, has thrown down the gauntlet — or maybe it's an oven mitt — to Canadian politicians to join his international campaign for mandatory diet education in rich countries.

Britain's Celebrity Chef Jamie Oliver Expands Food Crusade To G20, Cites Diet Problems In Canada