Advocacy Groups React to Report Canada Post Won’t Collect Confiscated Firearms

Advocacy Groups React to Report Canada Post Won’t Collect Confiscated Firearms
A Canada Post truck is parked at a sorting centre in Montreal on July 8, 2016. (The Canadian Press/Ryan Remiorz)
Matthew Horwood
4/23/2024
Updated:
4/23/2024
0:00

A firearms rights group is siding with Canada Post in its refusal to collect guns banned by the federal government in 2020.

The Canadian Coalition for Firearm Rights says the Crown corporation is justified in refusing to carry out the task.

“Canada Post is right to refuse the job. It would put their staff in direct danger being a target for organized crime,” Canadian Coalition for Firearm Rights vice-president Tracey Wilson told The Epoch Times.

“Every little Canada Post truck and depot would be at risk. They don’t have the security force, the secure storage, nor the secure transport to carry out this task.”

Ms. Wilson added that the Liberal government had not appropriately mapped out what a gun confiscation program would look like, claiming it would be “virtually impossible to identify, locate and confiscate over a half million guns from Canadians in a country of this size.”

Canada Post relayed its concerns about collecting the guns to the federal government in a recent letter, according to reporting by CBC News. The Crown corporation feared employees could end up in conflicts with gun owners hesitant to give up their firearms.

PolySeSouvient, a gun control group that represents survivors and families of the École Polytechnique massacre, said in a statement it was “deeply disappointed” by Canada Post’s refusal to support the implementation of the buyback. The group said the Crown corporation had experience with delivering millions of parcels every year, including guns sold by manufacturers and retail stores.

“Given these facts, it is unacceptable for Canada Post not to readily provide its expertise for the federal government’s buyback program, which a majority of Canadians support,” the group said in its statement, adding that the decision would put communities at increased risk of gun violence.

A spokesperson from Canada Post told The Epoch Times the corporation would “not be commenting at this time.”

Federal sources reportedly told CBC they were puzzled by Canada Post’s refusal to receive the firearms, because the Crown corporation delivers guns to Canadians who buy them online. The sources reportedly said that in talks with Canada Post, they proposed a compromise where the postal service would transport the weapons without the responsibility of receiving them directly from gun owners.

Firearms Buyback

During the 2019 and 2021 elections, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised the federal government would conduct a buyback of semi-automatic weapons, which it initially estimated would cost between $400 million and $600 million. However, internal government documents later revealed estimates that the program would cost nearly $2 billion.

The Liberals announced a ban on the use, sale and importation of more than 1,500 makes and models of “assault-style weapons” in May 2020 following a mass shooting a month earlier in Nova Scotia that left 22 people dead. The shooter had acquired five firearms illegally, including three that were imported from the United States.

The federal government announced Bill C-21 in February 2021, which introduced the buyback program for banned firearms. Legislation adopted last year also imposed a national freeze on the sale, purchase or transfer of handguns in Canada.

Ottawa had planned to begin its buyback on Prince Edward Island as a pilot project in December 2022 before the full rollout of the program began in spring 2023, but later backed down from the plan.
As part of its buyback program, Ottawa has said it would offer between $1,300 and $6,200 for each banned firearm. While Ottawa has tried to work alongside the provinces and various police forces to confiscate the guns, the provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and New Brunswick have urged it to “halt plans to use scarce RCMP and municipal police resources” to take away the firearms.