Toronto Star

Feds to stop short of total handgun ban, official says

New police powers, storage laws among options being discussed

- TONDA MACCHARLES

OTTAWA— The federal government is considerin­g further restrictio­ns on handguns but will stop short of an absolute ban, as the cost to buy back legally owned handguns is pegged as high as $2 billion, the Star has learned.

Escalating gun violence across the country, including Toronto, spurred calls for the federal Liberals to act. After public consultati­ons, deliberati­ons are now underway with a proposal being readied to take to cabinet early next year.

Among options under considerat­ion are the imposition of tougher legal obligation­s on gun owners, such as mandatory storage in secured lockers at a shooting range, not at home, and wider powers for police to preventive­ly suspend a gun owner’s licence where there is a risk someone may be harmed. For instance, if a health profession­al raised an alarm about an individual’s mental health, police would be able to suspend a licence in absence of a criminal charge or the registrati­on of a criminal conviction.

A senior government official who was granted anonymity in order to discuss the debate underway within government, said no final decisions have been made about whether to propose a ban on handguns and assault weapons.

In the case of the latter, there is no precise definition in law of just what an assault weapon is, but the government wants stricter controls on “assaultsty­le” firearms, said the source.

Overall, the Liberal government is looking to package a combinatio­n of measures that will be effective at addressing gun violence and at curbing the diversion of legal guns into illegal hands.

There are doubts that a ban will have the desired effect, according to the insider with knowledge of the file.

It appears, however, there is public support for a handgun and assault weapon ban in most parts of the country, with the source citing internal polling that indicates 70 per cent of Canadians would support a ban. The numbers vary across regions, the source said, with the highest support in Quebec at 76 per cent, followed by roughly 73 per cent in the Atlantic region, 70 per cent in the Greater Toronto Area and as low as 50 per cent in Western Canada.

(That overall number — 70 per cent — appears slightly higher than a recent opinion survey by Nanos Research conducted for CTV News, published in September, which said 48 per cent support a ban, while 19 per cent “somewhat support” a ban.)

After the tragic Danforth shooting in the summer, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appointed Scarboroug­h Southwest MP Bill Blair as minister of border security and organized crime reduction, and instructed Blair, a former Toronto police chief, to work with Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale to examine “a full ban on handguns and assault weapons in Canada, while not impeding the lawful use of firearms by Canadians.” Blair has said he wants to complete his examinatio­n by the end of this year.

On Thursday in Montreal — where the 29th anniversar­y of the École Polytechni­que massacre was marked — Trudeau pointed to Bill C-71, which his government has already introduced in the Commons. It tightens some aspects of current gun laws, but Trudeau said: “We are very open to doing more.”

“Certainly there is the problem of criminals’ access to assault weapons and handguns and we will be looking at measures to continue to keep our communitie­s safe.”

The mayors of Toronto and Montreal have urged Ottawa to adopt an absolute ban on handgun sales. Toronto Mayor John Tory also wants the Liberal government to enact tougher penalties for gun trafficker­s, tougher bail controls on accused persons with a track record of gun crimes, along with stricter gun storage laws.

The deadline for online consultati­ons has passed, and Blair completed stakeholde­r consultati­ons last week.

The source said the federal Liberal cabinet is not expected to deal with whatever recommenda­tions arise from Blair’s examinatio­n until 2019.

A second Liberal source suggested it is more likely that the government would look at enacting stricter storage, transporta­tion and transfer regulation­s than an outright ban.

There are1,400 shooting ranges across Canada where restricted and prohibited gun owners could be required to safely store their guns. Gun laws already require secure storage and handling of fire- arms and ammunition.

Yet advocates of stricter gun laws like Wendy Cukier, a cofounder of the Coalition for Gun Control, formed nearly 30 years ago in the wake of the 1989 Montreal massacre at École Polytechni­que, say a ban on handguns and assault-style weapons is crucial.

In an interview, Cukier said “an integrated approach” to gun violence is needed, including better screening of licence applicants, support for victims, and more resources for intelligen­ce-led policing to counter smuggling, and she added a ban is key to that.

“Whatever the measures are, they have to reduce access and reduce the risk that people who shouldn’t get those guns will get them,” Cukier said in an interview. “And I don’t know what besides a ban could achieve that result.”

She added had government­s acted sooner, the number of restricted and prohibited weapons would not have already ballooned from about 350,000 in 2004, to about one million, according to the annual reports of the commission­er of firearms.

The notion of banning certain firearms raises questions such as whether Ottawa would “grandfathe­r” those owners who already have legally registered handguns and allow them to keep their weapons, or whether the government would buy back their weapons.

The source said the $1.5-billion to $2-billion estimate for a handgun buyback was based on a loose estimate of one million handguns registered in Canada. The source added there are “probably” twice that number in illegal, unregister­ed handguns in circulatio­n.

In fact, the RCMP-led Canadian Firearms Program says 861,850 handguns were registered to individual­s in Canada as of Sept. 30. The Mounties say those handguns are registered to 292,701 licensed gun owners. On top of that, according to the federal government, there are about 100,000 other non-handgun firearms — usually rifles and shotguns — legally owned and registered in Canada.

The federal government’s consultati­on document published to inform public debate on a handgun ban says in most cases, individual­s own handguns for sport shooting or as part of a collection and it acknowledg­es “most gun crimes are not committed with legallyown­ed firearms.”

But the same document outlines a big concern for Blair and the government: that thefts from legal owners represent a growing source of illegally-acquired domestic handguns and other firearms, citing a 70-percent increase in break-ins to steal a firearm between 2010 and 2017 (from 673 to 1,175 incidents, according to Statistics Canada). It says there is no informatio­n about whether the thefts were from individual­s or businesses, or whether they were related to improper storage or transporta­tion of firearms.

It acknowledg­ed any ban of handguns or assault weapons “would primarily affect legal firearms owners, while the illicit market would be indirectly affected as there would be fewer available to potentiall­y divert.”

Federal Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer says if he formed government he would review laws and repeal any regulation­s or policies that unnecessar­ily target law-abiding gun owners. He says he would ensure Parliament, not the RCMP, has sole authority to reclassify guns, and he would provide more money for police to target gangs, to support programs for youth, and to conduct rigorous background checks on wouldbe gun owners.

 ?? JIM RANKIN TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? After the Danforth shooting, Justin Trudeau told MP Bill Blair to examine “a full ban on handguns and assault weapons in Canada.”
JIM RANKIN TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO After the Danforth shooting, Justin Trudeau told MP Bill Blair to examine “a full ban on handguns and assault weapons in Canada.”

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