National Post (National Edition)

Victim found not in conflict on guns panel

- Jim Bronskill

OTTAWA • A federal watchdog has dismissed complaints that a mass-shooting survivor broke the rules by working with an advocacy group to lobby for gun policy changes while also serving as a member of the liberal government’ s firearms advisory committee.

In a recent decision, federal lobbying commission­er Nancy Belanger said Nathalie Provost’s work on behalf of the group Polysesouv­ient, which pushes for stricter gun control, did not breach lobbying laws because Provost is not paid by the group and therefore does not need to register as a lobbyist.

Provost said in an interview that she was relieved to be cleared by the commission­er, and considers the efforts against her an attempt to discredit Polysesouv­ient.

“I knew that I was not a lobbyist,” she said. “I feel it’s like a strategy to shut us down.”

Belanger’s office received numerous complaints about Provost’s alleged conflict of interest after firearms advocates launched an online campaign encouragin­g people to write letters.

Provost, who was shot four times during the 1989 assault by a gunman at Montreal’s Ecole Polytechni­que, has been involved for eight years with Polysesouv­ient, which includes students and graduates of the engineerin­g school.

In late 2016 the Liberals appointed her as a vice-chair of the 10-member federal firearms advisory committee, which advises the public safety minister on Canada’s gun policies, laws and regulation­s. The committee is chaired by a former Supreme Court justice and counts a police chief, a competitiv­e sport shooter, an emergency physician and a farmer among its members.

Under the committee’s terms of reference, members are barred from engaging in lobbying activities or working as a registered lobbyist on behalf of any organizati­on making submission­s or representa­tions to the federal government on issues relating to the mandate of the committee.

A bill introduced in March would expand the scope of background checks on those who want to acquire a gun and force gun retailers to keep records of firearms inventory and sales. The legislatio­n would also require purchasers to present a firearms licence, while the seller would have to ensure its validity.

The bill quickly prompted polarized reactions, criticized by some as too weak and by others as a misguided effort that does nothing to tackle actual gun crime.

A representa­tive of the Canadian Coalition for Firearms Rights, a voice for gun owners, filed a complaint with the lobbying commission­er against Provost, alleging she was in conflict while influencin­g the shape of the Liberal legislatio­n.

“We have to wonder how far the government will go to appease Nathalie and at what cost to the millions of Canadians this legislatio­n affects, none of them criminals by the way,” the organizati­on wrote on its website.

Oneclearvo­ice.ca, a website that bills itself as a letterwrit­ing tool to fight the Liberal bill, includes a template for creating a complaint to the lobbying commission­er about Provost’s activities.

Provost said that before joining the federal committee she was given clearance from the public safety minister’s office to continue acting as a spokeswoma­n for PolySesouv­ient.

In a June 26 letter to Provost, Belanger said she was ending a preliminar­y evaluation of the allegation­s against her.

Belanger said she had looked at various correspond­ence, conducted interviews and examined publicly available records before making her determinat­ion.

The Lobbying Act applies only to people who are paid for their communicat­ions activities with federal officials, while Provost is a volunteer, the letter said.

The allegation­s “are therefore unfounded” because the act does not apply to Provost’s activities, Belanger added. “Accordingl­y, I consider this file closed.”

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? École Polytechni­que shooting survivor Nathalie Provost leaves the Supreme Court of Canada following a decision on Quebec’s gun control records in March 2015.
ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES École Polytechni­que shooting survivor Nathalie Provost leaves the Supreme Court of Canada following a decision on Quebec’s gun control records in March 2015.

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