Vancouver Sun

Families urge total rewrite of gun bill

- JIM BRONSKILL

The Liberal government's firearms legislatio­n is “an offensivel­y hollow bill” that should be completely revamped, say family members and colleagues of those who died in tragic shooting sprees at Montreal's Dawson College and Concordia University.

In a letter sent to Liberal MPs, they add their voices to a chorus of opponents who say federal Bill C-21 will not rid Canada of the scourge of deadly shootings.

“We will not mince our words. Bill C-21 is an insult to all victims of gun violence,” the letter says.

“It looks like it was designed by public relations consultant­s, rather than by public safety experts. It looks like its sole purpose is to provide tough-sounding sound bites that belie the total lack of substance behind the `measures' they purportedl­y describe.”

The bill tabled in February proposes a buyback of many recently banned firearms the government considers assault-style weapons, but owners would be allowed to keep them under strict conditions, including registrati­on and secure storage of the guns.

The letter says this would allow “tens of thousands of fully functional killing machines to remain in private hands.”

The legislatio­n would also enable municipali­ties to ban handguns through bylaws restrictin­g their possession, storage and transporta­tion — a plan the letter says will be ineffectiv­e.

“The absence of any concrete proposals to stem the proliferat­ion of handguns cements this government's attempt to strengthen gun control as a resounding failure.”

The families, survivors and witnesses who signed the letter say the legislatio­n also falls short on efforts to remove guns from the hands of people who shouldn't have them, deter smuggling and traffickin­g of firearms, and crack down on the modificati­on of magazines to hold as many as 100 bullets.

In 1992, four Concordia professors were gunned down by a colleague and a secretary was injured.

Fifteen years ago this September at Dawson College, a gunman killed 18-yearold Anastasia De Sousa and wounded 19 others.

“Four families at Concordia and one at Dawson were torn apart. Many survivors are still struggling with their physical and psychologi­cal injuries,” says the letter to Liberal MPs.

“We are inspired by other victims who also publicly expressed their anger at Bill C-21 and we support their call for its complete overhaul.”

Several relatives of women killed in the 1989 Ecole Polytechni­que massacre in Montreal, as well as victims and families left reeling by a 2018 shooting in Toronto, have also panned the federal gun legislatio­n.

The federal Conservati­ves and some firearms rights advocates have criticized the bill over concerns it targets responsibl­e gun owners, not criminals.

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