Sherbrooke Record

Gun-control group fears Liberals have ‘abandoned’ efforts on assault-style firearms

- By Jim Bronskill The Canadian Press

Aprominent gun-control group fears the Liberal government has abandoned its commitment to enact a comprehens­ive ban on assault-style firearms, citing “no tangible progress” on key steps to fulfil the pledge.

In an open letter to Public Safety Minister Dominic Leblanc, Polysesouv­ient spokeswoma­n Nathalie Provost expresses concern that “we won’t see these measures materializ­e in our lifetimes” as the clock ticks toward a federal election that must be held by October of next year.

A record of wasting public support and bungling various opportunit­ies over the years would be a “devastatin­g legacy” for the Liberals, wrote Provost, a survivor of the 1989 mass shooting at Montreal’s École Polytechni­que.

The group wants the government to follow through on plans to proceed with a buyback of banned assault-style firearms including the AR-15, prohibit others that fell through the legislativ­e cracks and strengthen regulation­s on largecapac­ity magazines.

The office of Public Safety Minister Dominic Leblanc said in a statement to The Canadian Press it is “continuing to put strong measures in place to tackle gun violence.”

The letter from Polysesouv­ient comes about a week after an assassinat­ion attempt on former U.S. president Donald Trump using what has been described as an Ar-15style rifle.

Late last year, Parliament passed a government bill that cemented restrictio­ns on handguns, increased penalties for firearm traffickin­g and aimed to curb homemade ghost guns.

The legislatio­n also included a ban on assault-style firearms that fall under a new technical definition. However, the definition didn’t apply to models that were already on the market when the bill passed.

Polysesouv­ient cautioned that the potential public safety benefits of most of the key measures would depend on forthcomin­g regulation­s that will flesh out the details.

Conservati­ve MPS and some gun owners have vehemently opposed the Liberal efforts to ban certain firearms as an attack on law-abiding citizens.

Leblanc has said the government will re-establish the Canadian Firearms Advisory Committee to independen­tly review the classifica­tion of existing models that fall under the new definition of a prohibited firearm in the bill.

He told senators in October the exercise would identify guns legitimate­ly used for hunting, which would be excluded from the ban.

Leblanc said the government would also implement a longplanne­d buyback of firearm models and variants, including the AR-15 and Ruger Mini-14, that were already banned through order-in-council in May 2020.

In addition, the government said it would enact regulation­s to ensure a comprehens­ive ban on large-capacity magazines.

Polysesouv­ient says tens of thousands of assault-style guns prohibited in 2020 remain in the hands of their owners, while hundreds of arbitraril­y exempted models remain legal and new ones continue to enter the market.

Polysesouv­ient says tens of thousands of assault-style guns prohibited in 2020 remain in the hands of their owners, while hundreds of arbitraril­y exempted models remain legal and new ones continue to enter

the market.

Despite federal promises and commitment­s, Polysesouv­ient says, “there has been no tangible progress” on:

— revival of the advisory committee that will decide which current models should be prohibited;

— the planned buyback program; — consultati­ons on introducti­on of a pre-authorizat­ion process for new firearm models to ensure they are properly classified;

— or consultati­ons on strengthen­ing magazine regulation­s;

Given the delays, the letter says, “we are beginning to suspect that either the Liberal government is not competent enough to deliver on its nine years of promises to ban assault weapons, or that it has abandoned its commitment to do so because it fears further stoking the wrath of the gun lobby.”

In its statement, Leblanc’s office said the government is committed to institutin­g a program that would provide current owners fair compensati­on for their assaultsty­le firearms.

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