National Post

Liberals walk back gun-marking start date

- Jim Bronskill

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 a nnounced 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.

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 Conservati­ve 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 measures aimed at making it harder for criminals to get and use handguns and assault weapons.

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.

Brown’s memo to Goodale says many Canadian gun manufactur­ers exporting to the United States already mark their firearms in a manner that would meet or exceed requiremen­ts set out in the regulation­s to meet U. S. standards and at least one importer has voluntaril­y applied import marks.

Regardless, the memo says, the majority of firearms advocates and businesses are “strongly opposed” to the regulation­s due to the perception they would saddle manufactur­ers and importers with additional costs, while providing little public safety benefit.

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