Medicine Hat News

Liberals delay gun-marking regulation­s despite election promise

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OTTAWA The Trudeau government is delaying implementa­tion of firearm-marking regulation­s intended to help police trace guns used in crimes — despite a 2015 campaign pledge to immediatel­y enact them.

The government announced Friday it will defer the regulation­s, which were slated to come into force June 1, until the beginning of December 2018.

It said the deferral will provide time needed to propose amendments to the regulation­s, first drafted in 2004, adding that details would be made available later this month.

The firearms community has long opposed the regulation­s and continues to “advocate against their coming into force,” says an internal note to Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale, recently obtained by The Canadian Press through the Access to Informatio­n law.

The regulation­s would require domestical­ly manufactur­ed firearms to bear the name of the manufactur­er, serial number, and “Canada” or “CA,” while imported guns would have to carry the “Canada” or “CA” designatio­n along with the last two digits of the year of import.

The measures would help Canada meet the requiremen­ts of the United Nations Firearms Protocol and a convention of the Organizati­on of American States.

“In addition to the treaty imperative­s, firearms markings have value for domestic and internatio­nal law enforcemen­t as they, in conjunctio­n with firearms records, can be used to trace crime guns,” says the memo to Goodale from deputy minister Malcolm Brown.

Brown’s ultimate recommenda­tion to Goodale on the markings was stripped from the memo before release.

The previous Tory government delayed the regulation­s several times.

In their election platform, the Liberals said they would “immediatel­y” implement gun-marking regulation­s. The party also promised other, longer-term measures aimed at making it harder for criminals to get and use handguns and assault weapons.

In addition, the marking-regulation promise was included in a briefing book document prepared for the prime minister entitled “Key Commitment­s for Action in First 100 Days.”

Some firearms advocates have argued the obligation to mark imported guns would mean acquiring marking technology or making arrangemen­ts for another company to apply markings, with an estimated cost of $200 per gun, according to a federal notice published in 2015.

However, an independen­t study commission­ed by the government said the cost to stamp or engrave markings for Canadian manufactur­ers and large importers would range from nothing at all to $25 per firearm. It was not possible to gauge the impact on individual­s and small importers.

 ??  ?? Ralph Goodale
Ralph Goodale

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