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Alberta

Provinces oppose federal use of police resources

Oct 14, 2022 | 6:07 PM

The Alberta government says provinces have joined together at the 2022 Meeting of Federal, Provincial and Territorial Ministers Responsible for Justice and Public Safety to discuss the federal government’s plan to use police resources to confiscate legally acquired firearms.

The province says Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and New Brunswick have called on the federal government to halt plans to use scarce RCMP and municipal police resources to confiscate more than 100,000 legally acquired firearms from Canadians. The provincial government says the Prairie provinces had already written to their RCMP divisions indicating that provincial funding should not be used for this purpose.

The Alberta government says the four provinces also called on the federal government to ensure that no funding for the Guns and Gang Violence Action Fund or other public safety initiatives be diverted to the federal firearms confiscation program. Instead, the government says, funding should be used to fight the criminal misuse of firearms by tackling border integrity, smuggling and trafficking.

The UCP government says the four provinces also called on the federal government to direct all communications related to the federal firearms confiscation program through appropriate channels – provincial and territorial ministers responsible for Justice and Public Safety.

“Two years ago, the federal government said that using police resources would be ‘expensive and inefficient.’ Now the federal government has resorted to using police resources to seize firearms from Canadians. Make no mistake, the federal firearms confiscation program will cost us billions and will not improve public safety. Alberta’s government is not legally obligated to provide resources and will not do so,” said Tyler Shandro, Minister of Justice and Solicitor General for Alberta, in a press release Friday.

“While we fully support crime initiatives that focus on the issues related to the criminal use of illegal firearms, preventing and combating gang violence and addressing the issue of illegal or smuggled guns in our province, we don’t support those that impact law-abiding hunters, sport shooters, ranchers, farmers and Indigenous people who use firearms for lawful and good reasons,” added Christine Tell, Minister of Corrections, Policing and Public Safety for Saskatchewan, and Bronwyn Eyre, Minister of Justice and Attorney General for Saskatchewan.

“Manitoba has consistently stated that many aspects of the federal approach to gun crimes unnecessarily target lawful gun owners while having little impact on criminals, who are unlikely to follow gun regulations in any event. In Manitoba’s view, any buy-back program cannot further erode our scarce provincial police resources already suffering from large vacancy rates, and away from focusing on investigation of violent crimes,” shared Kelvin Goertzen, Minister of Justice and Attorney General for Manitoba.

“New Brunswick’s bottom line is this: RCMP resources are spread thin as it is. We have made it clear to the Government of Canada that we cannot condone any use of those limited resources, at all, in their planned buyback program,” stated Kris Austin, Minister of Public Safety for New Brunswick.