PUBLICATION: WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
DATE
:
THU JAN.08,2004
PAGE
:
A10
CLASS
:
Focus
BYLINE:
Editorial Staff
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Editorial
- Practical gun control
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Prime
Minister Paul Martin intends to deal with difficulties in the government's gun
registration program. The attempt is likely to provoke loud clamour among the
most intense advocates and opponents of gun registration. Mr. Martin should,
however, aim to satisfy the large majority of Canadians who want a reasonable
solution that improves public safety at reasonable expense. In announcing
yesterday the recall of Parliament for Feb. 2, Mr. Martin said he was not going
to scrap the national firearms registry. "We are committed to gun control
and we are committed to the registration of weapons," he said. "But
there have been a number of problems and these problems have got to be looked at
and have got to be dealt with."
One
problem is compliance. Many Canadians who own guns see no merit in registering
them with the government and many have not done so, despite repeated threats and
postponements. The government believes that it has licensed 1.9 million of the
2.3 million gun-owners in the country, but it has not prisons enough to hold the
other 400,000 and so they will not be forced to comply.
Another
problem is administrative difficulty. The idea of writing a single list
containing entries for every gun and every gun-owner in Canada seemed feasible
when it was first floated but experience has shown that the work is beyond the
means of the government.
Another
problem is expense. The program cost $200 million in 2000-01 and the government
was hoping to bring the expense down to $67 million a year by 2008-09. The
number of gun crimes in Canada, small to start with, continues to be small
despite the enormous continuing expense of registration.
All
these problems can be solved if the government registers firearms when they
change hands and quits worrying about the others. The annual flow of new entries
will be reduced to a steady trickle, which will be far easier to manage than the
present campaign of forcing unwilling gun owners to dig into the backs of their
closets and haul out their dusty old shotguns. Compliance will improve, expense
will decline and eventually the government will have a list of nearly every
firearm.
Albina
Guarnieri, Mississauga MP and Minister of State for Civil Preparedness, who is
reviewing the gun registry program for Mr. Martin, can hardly ignore the
political symbolism of gun control, but if she focuses on practical measures
that apply scarce resources in the most efficient way to achieve useful results
for Canadians, she will have the public behind her.