Canadian Gun Registry on last leg; Finally
common sense justice
Winnipeg
Sun, 02/06
By TOM BRODBECK
It was one of the biggest financial boondoggles
of the 1990s.
But
now, after years of public backlash and auditor
general reports highlighting the program's disastrous
financial management, Canada's failed long-gun
registry will be coming to an end. It's not a
question of "if" the new Conservative government
winds down the gun registry, which has cost taxpayers
well over $1 billion to administer, with no benefit
to show for it. It's a matter of "when" and "how"
-- questions the new federal Justice Minister
Vic Toews gave the Winnipeg Sun some insight into.
"We've
been very clear in terms of our desire to abolish
(the gun registry)," said Toews. "How we can actually
accomplish that remains to be seen ... but we'd
like to move on that as quickly as possible."
It's
unclear whether the Tories would have enough support
among opposition MPs to repeal the long-gun registry
through legislation.
GUT
THE PROGRAM
But even if they don't, Toews says there's one
avenue he's exploring that would not require the
consent of the House of Commons.
Toews
says he may be able to gut the program by repealing
the gun registry's regulations, which could be
done by cabinet.
Legislation
is passed by Parliament. But the regulations that
give them meaning and detail are controlled by
cabinet.
"Whether
that change can occur through regulatory means
-- that is, by the governor general in council
(cabinet) -- or whether it needs legislative changes
remains to be examined," said Toews. "The governor
in council could repeal those regulations and
put other regulations in place."
And
the long-gun registry would go the way of the
dodo bird. Finally.
Canada
has long had strict rules governing hand-guns,
automatic weapons and other illegal firearms,
including registration of hand-guns used in gun
clubs. Those are good laws.
But
registering long-guns -- hunting rifles, essentially
owned by responsible hunters and farmers -- was
something new the former Liberal government brought
in during the mid-1990s.
There
never was any evidence that forcing responsible
long-gun owners to register their rifles would
deter crime. The only thing it managed to do was
cost taxpayers a fortune and cause duck hunters
a lot of frustration. That's why it's going to
be repealed.
Toews
says the abolishment of the gun registry would
likely occur at the same time his government brings
in tougher penalties for gun crimes, including
mandatory minimum sentences of 10 years for crimes
such as armed robbery and aggravated sexual assault
with a firearm.
Which
means judges would be forced to put gun-toting
criminals away for at least 10 years. And there
would be no more judicial "discretion" to do otherwise.
It
could mean fewer Eight-Ball Awards handed out
in this column. But that's a price I'm willing
to pay.
"Whatever
we do when it comes to repealing the long-gun
registry, there will be an effective firearms
program in place that is meant to deter crime,"
said Toews. "We have always maintained that we
need effective crime control when it comes to
dealing with firearms."
Provinces or
Territories - North West Territories, Nunavut