Calgary Herald

Federal Liberals enlists IBM in buyback

- JIM BRONSKILL

OT TAWA • The Trudeau government has awarded a contract to IBM Canada to support the developmen­t, design and implementa­tion of a buyback program for recently prohibited firearms.

The contract is worth almost $1.2 million, according to an award notice posted on a federal informatio­n portal.

The Liberals outlawed a wide range of firearms in early May, saying the guns were designed for the battlefiel­d, not hunting or sport shooting.

The ban covers some 1,500 models and variants of what the government considers assault-style firearms, meaning they can no longer be legally used, sold or imported.

In announcing the ban, the government proposed a program that would allow current owners to receive compensati­on for turning in the designated firearms.

While gun-control groups applauded the move, sport shooters, firearm rights advocates and some Conservati­ve MPS questioned the value of the measures.

Public Safety Canada invited 15 consulting firms, including IBM Canada, to come up with a “range of options and approaches” for the planned program to compensate gun owners.

Under the first phase of the contract, to be completed by Feb. 8, IBM will consult with other federal agencies, possibly other levels of government and industry experts to devise options that include:

❚ A compensati­on plan for each affected firearm;

❚ Analysis of benefits and risks associated with each compensati­on model; and

❚ Identifica­tion of “other considerat­ions” that might affect the feasibilit­y of each approach.

A second phase of the project will entail any necessary review and revision of the program design, as well as implementa­tion of the selected options.

“The program will focus on ensuring it offers fair compensati­on to affected owners and businesses while at the same time making sure program implementa­tion and management costs are well-priced and sustainabl­e,” said Tim Warmington, a Public Safety Canada spokesman. “Further informatio­n on the design of the buyback program and any potential compensati­on for affected firearms will be provided once it is available.”

The group Polysesouv­ient, a leading proponent of stricter gun control, has urged the Liberal government to make the buyback program mandatory.

It says allowing owners of recently banned firearms to keep them would make it easier for a different government to reverse the ban in the future. The group also wants to see the new prohibitio­ns, ushered in through regulation, embedded into law to complete the ban and render it permanent.

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