Status of Implementation of Bill C–71

Date: March 1, 2022                                                                                                                             
Classification: Unclassified
Branch / Agency: CPB

Proposed Response:

If pressed on the delay in implementing C-71

IF PRESSED ON REPEAL OF GOVERNMENT POWER TO DOWNGRADE THE CLASSIFICATION OF A FIREARM:

Background:

An Act to amend certain Acts and Regulations in relation to firearms (Bill C-71) received Royal Assent on June 21, 2019. Two elements were brought into force via an Order in Council on July 7, 2021:

Two regulatory amendments were pre-published in the Canada Gazette, Part I, on June 26, 2021, for a 30 day public comment period:

The Firearms Act requires that regulations be tabled in both Houses of Parliament for up to 30 sitting days. The regulations were tabled on June 21, 2021. On December 16, 2021, the House of Commons’ Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security returned the regulations to the House without changes. The Senate’s Standing Committee on National Security and Defence did not study the regulations prior to the expiry of the 30 day clock on February 4, 2022. The earliest anticipated date for bringing these regulations into force would be May 2022.

The final element of Bill C-71, the repeal of the “deeming provisions”, would remove the authority for the Governor-in-Council to ‘deem’ firearms to be of a less restrictive class, irrespective of any RCMP technical finding, and return full control over technical firearms classification to the RCMP. Bringing this element into force requires a legislative change.

Several other provisions, including those clarifying that seized firearms are considered forfeited to the Crown and those allowing remaining long-gun registration records to be transferred to Quebec, came into force over the last two years.

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