Parliamentary Committee Notes: Public Safety Canada – Assault-Style Firearms Compensation Program at Supplementary Estimates B
Proposed Response
- This Government’s commitment to removing assault-style firearms from our communities, while compensating owners, is an important step to reducing firearms violence in Canada. It is also aligned with the Mass Casualty Report recommendation for the Government to reduce the number of prohibited semi-automatic firearms in circulation.
- The Government will launch the Assault-Style Firearms Compensation Program in two phases. The first phase will launch in Fall 2024 and will focus on collecting prohibited firearms and devices from businesses.
- In October 2024, the Program requested access to funding over three years to implement the second phase of the Program to individual firearm owners.
- In order to safely and securely remove prohibited firearms from circulation, the Program will rely on the expertise and infrastructure of the private sector, provincial and municipal governments, and our federal partners, including the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.
Financial Implications
- This Supplementary Estimates B proposal is seeking to access a total of $32.0 million in budgetary expenditures, with a total of $22.3 million in Vote 1 and $9.7 million in Vote 5 appropriations.
- The majority of these funds will enable the Program to enter into agreements with Program delivery enablers for the collection, transportation, and destruction of assault-style firearms held by individuals.
- An additional portion of the funds are to expand the functionalities of the Web portal and Case Management System, which was developed for Phase 1 (Businesses). The web portal will provide a user-friendly interface for individuals to declare their intention for their firearms and ultimately provide the means for compensating individuals who turn them in or deactivate them.
- The remaining funds are for salary and non salary costs at Public Safety Canada to continue Program planning and implementation activities.
Background
In the 2019, 2020, and 2021 Speeches from the Throne and the associated mandate letters to the Minister of Public Safety, Minister of Justice and Attorney General, and the Deputy Prime Minister, the Government committed to a broad gun control agenda that included banning assault-style firearms (ASFs) and establishing the Assault-Style Firearms Compensation Program (ASFCP) for the newly prohibited firearms.
On May 1, 2020, the Government prohibited over 1,500 makes and models of ASFs, their variants, and some upper receivers with an amendment to the Regulations Prescribing Certain Firearms and Other Weapons, Components and Parts of Weapons, Accessories, Cartridge Magazines, Ammunition and Projectiles as Prohibited, Restricted or Non-Restricted (the Regulations) by an Order in Council (May 1, 2020, OIC). Of those, nine principal models of ASFs are prohibited as they have semi-automatic action with sustained rapid-fire capability (i.e., tactical military design with large magazine capacity), are of modern design, and are present in Canada in large volumes. Also included are firearms: with a bore diameter of 20 mm or greater (i.e., grenade launcher); or with a muzzle energy of greater than 10,000 joules (e.g., 0.50 caliber BMG sniper rifles). Since May 1, 2020, approximately 400 variants of the nine principal models of ASFs have been determined to be prohibited under the OIC. In total, the OIC added approximately 2,000 makes and models to the Regulations. Approximately 19,500 rifles and shotguns suitable for hunting remain available.
The prohibition limits access to the most dangerous firearms and removes them from the Canadian market. An Amnesty Order under the Criminal Code came into force at the same time as the amendments to the Regulations and, in October 2023, was extended to October 30, 2025, to protect lawful ASF owners and businesses from criminal liability and to allow them time to come into compliance with the law. During the amnesty period, impacted owners have a variety of methods to dispose of their prohibited firearms and prohibited devices, including delivering them to police for no compensation, deactivating them at their own expense, exporting them, or, if a business, returning them to the manufacturer. The Amnesty Order also provides a temporary exception for Indigenous peoples’ exercising their section 35 constitutional hunting right, as well as those who use firearms for sustenance hunting, which enables them to continue to use their firearms prohibited in 2020 (if previously non-restricted) until a suitable replacement can be found.
The total number of affected ASFs is estimated to be approximately 150,000. Of these, approximately 110,000 were formerly classified as restricted, and thus the details on their ownership, location, and characteristics are known. The majority of the formerly restricted firearms are located, in descending order, in Ontario (39 per cent), Alberta (21 per cent), and British Columbia (19 per cent). The remaining approximately 40,000 ASFs were previously classified as non-restricted. This is an estimate since non-restricted firearms do not need to be registered and therefore their total volume in Canada is unknown. This estimation is based on open-source records from 2012, which have been increased by 25 per cent to account for observable trends in market growth. Approximately 9,000 ASFs (6 per cent of the total) are owned by businesses, not individuals. Industry estimates are that formerly non-restricted firearms exist in volumes approximately tenfold the Government estimates, and these figures were adopted in a 2021 analysis performed by the Parliamentary Budget Office. The variance is most likely attributable to differences in calculation methodologies employed to estimate the number of formerly non-restricted ASFs (i.e., open-source records versus a survey of current and historical import permits issued to industry members).
The Government has announced that the implementation of the ASFCP will occur in two phases; first with licensed firearms businesses in 2024 followed by individual firearm owners in due course.
During the amnesty period, including throughout the implementation of the ASFCP, owners may still choose to dispose of their affected ASFs and prohibited devices (i.e., upper receivers of the M16, AR-10, AR-15 and M4 pattern ASFs) in the ways set out in the Order (e.g., turning them in to police, or having them deactivated for no compensation, or exported).
- Date modified: