Canadian Firearms Program

Canadian Firearms Program
Programme canadien des armes à feu

Heraldic badge of the RCMP
Agency overview
Formed 2008
Preceding agency
  • Canada Firearms Centre
Jurisdiction Firearm Registration and Licensing
Headquarters Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Annual budget $84 million[1]
Minister responsible
Agency executives
Parent agency Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Website CFP Webpage

Canadian Firearms Program (CFP) (French: Programme canadien des armes à feu) (PCAF), formerly Canada Firearms Centre is a Canadian government program within the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Policing Support Services, responsible for licensing and regulating firearms in Canada.

As of December 2014, the Canadian Firearms Program recorded a total of 1,989,181 valid firearms licences, which is roughly 5.6% of the Canadian population. The four most licensed provinces are, in order, Ontario, Quebec, Alberta and British Columbia. The provinces and territories with the highest rate of licensing are Yukon (18.1%), Newfoundland and Labrador (13.9%), Northwest Territories (11.9%) and New Brunswick (9.1%).[3][4]

History

Bill C-68: An Act Respecting Firearms and Other Weapons was assented in 1995, two years after the bill was introduced by the government to the House of Commons in targeting firearms licensing and registration. CFC was officially created and began operation in 1996 to oversee the administration of the Firearms Act and the Canadian Firearms Program.[5]

On May 17, 2006, responsibility for the Canadian Firearms Program was transferred from the Ministry of Public Safety to the RCMP.

On September 4, 2008, the Canada Firearms Centre and the Firearms Support Services Directorate of RCMP was merged to create the Canadian Firearms Program.

CFP celebrated the 10th anniversary of the opening of the Central Processing Site in Miramichi, New Brunswick, in 2008.[6]

Organization

Under the Constitution of Canada, the federal government has the power to regulate firearm ownership under the criminal law power (See Supreme Court of Canada, Reference re Firearms Act). Despite this, each province is free to opt in to operate the program and its regulations – Ontario, Quebec, Prince Edward Island, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia have chosen to opt in[7] and British Columbia is contemplating the idea.[8] However, the CFP continues to be the central data-processing site and is responsible for the physical issuance of possession and acquisition licences in all cases.[9] Those who chose to opt in would have all the administrative fees reimbursed by the federal government per section 95 of the Firearms Act.[10]

Federal

CFP is a program within the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The chain of command is as follows:[2]

The Commissioner of the RCMP serves as the Commissioner of Firearms, the chief executive of the program. The Commissioner is assisted by Deputy Commissioner, Specialized Policing Services. They are responsible to the Minister of Public Safety Canada and thus accountable to the Parliament of Canada.

An RCMP officer of assistant commissioner rank is appointed as the Director General to oversee the day-to-day administration of the CFP.

A Registrar of Firearms is appointed to issue and revoke firearms registration certificates and carriers’ licences and maintain the records on Canadian Firearms Registry. The Registrar is also responsible for administering the Public Agents Firearms Regulations.

There are four major areas within the CFP, which are managed by the Deputy Commissioner, Policing Support Services:

The CFP offers a wide variety of investigative support services to police:

Provincial

Each province has its own chief firearms officer (CFO), appointed either by the government of Canada or by the executive council of the province. The three territories share a CFO with another province (British Columbia with Yukon, Alberta with the Northwest Territories, and Manitoba with Nunavut). They are responsible for making decisions (grant, deny, revoke or put conditions) on licensing (i.e. possession and acquisition licence), authorization to transport, authorization to carry and transfer of firearms along with all of its administrative work.[11]

Each province also appoints firearms officers (generally speaking, police officers or RCMP civilian members) to inspect and ensure compliance within the definition of the Firearms Act. They may apply to court for a preventative prohibition order if it is in the public's interest that a person should not be in possession of any weapons regulated under the Firearms Act.[12] In carrying out their duties, they can demand firearms be presented to them and samples to be taken.[13] Failure to comply is a summary offence which may lead to complications when one is up to renew his or her firearms licence for previous contravention of the Firearms Act.[14]

See also

References

External links

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