• Thanks for stopping by. Logging in to a registered account will remove all generic ads. Please reach out with any questions or concerns.

The Great Gun Control Debate- 2.0

Yesterday, IPSC Ontario sent out a good breakdown of what's required today to take your legally owned Canadian-registered handgun OUTCAN for competitions and, more importantly, to bring it back to Canada. In short, you now need to jump through additional hoops to obtain an import permit to bring your handgun back into Canada. The process is relatively easy and quick (for now) and will add about $20 to your overall match costs. But, one must plan ahead and have all their ducks in a row before applying.
Death by 1000 cuts. I am still waiting for some handgun transfers from a few months ago. BS that a legally required process isn’t manned enough to be even remotely efficient.
 
I don't know how many RCMP are in Alberta. Alberta is moving to a provincial force. Most of those RCMP should be enough to pump up the CFOs to where they are somewhat efficient and can move a file slightly faster than a glacier.πŸ™„πŸ˜
 
I don't know how many RCMP are in Alberta. Alberta is moving to a provincial force. Most of those RCMP should be enough to pump up the CFOs to where they are somewhat efficient and can move a file slightly faster than a glacier.πŸ™„πŸ˜
The Firearms program is almost entirely divorced from the operational RCMP, and its a damned shame the RCMP allows such a wasteful and useless program tarnish its already fading reputation. The only real cross over is the National Weapons Enforcement Support Team, who assist investigators in firearms related investigations. A group of SME's if you will.

I can assure you even if every municipal and provincially employed Mountie in Alberta was reassigned to new duties tomorrow, none of them would end up processing paper in Miramichi. That's a Maritime welfare program run by the feds to prod along employment, and the RCMP is desperately short of actual cops in literally every other location.
 
The Firearms program is almost entirely divorced from the operational RCMP, and its a damned shame the RCMP allows such a wasteful and useless program tarnish its already fading reputation. The only real cross over is the National Weapons Enforcement Support Team, who assist investigators in firearms related investigations. A group of SME's if you will.

I can assure you even if every municipal and provincially employed Mountie in Alberta was reassigned to new duties tomorrow, none of them would end up processing paper in Miramichi. That's a Maritime welfare program run by the feds to prod along employment, and the RCMP is desperately short of actual cops in literally every other location.
So it seems to me there are very good reasons to support the Surrey transition and the Alberta Provincial Police initiative. The Quebec and Ontario example seems to be functioning, so I don't understand why there is such opposition to that. The surplus RCMP from Surrey and Alberta who would rather remain mounties could then be used to backfill all of those understaffed GD locations wherever they may be. Seems like a win for everyone.

Redfive, do you know the general feelings of the RCMP membership in Alberta about the APP initiative?
 
So it seems to me there are very good reasons to support the Surrey transition and the Alberta Provincial Police initiative. The Quebec and Ontario example seems to be functioning, so I don't understand why there is such opposition to that. The surplus RCMP from Surrey and Alberta who would rather remain mounties could then be used to backfill all of those understaffed GD locations wherever they may be. Seems like a win for everyone.

Redfive, do you know the general feelings of the RCMP membership in Alberta about the APP initiative?
The Surete, OPP grew over time. That’s why it was successful, the Surrey transition is about 500 members behind and can’t get their own vehicles.

Replacing forces nowadays is a humongous undertaking, and the RNC is a good example- because they started trying to expand themselves in the 90s and kept hitting logistical walls- and they are orders of magnitude smaller,

Before I left Alberta I was on the outer periphery of the APP stuff you’re seeing in the news right now. I won’t say the governments stance then- but this β€œplan” was shown with some minor differences. At the time it was given back as a plan we had already explored- hubs etc- and was determined to be unworkable- we had tried it other places and other times and on a smaller scale it wasn’t working, so on a divisional scale it was absurd.

The Alberta governments β€œplan” relies on making people live places they don’t want to live, for longer periods- just because they say so.

They can’t even fill the sheriff seats in these places on a micro scale.

In the end- when they transition they ll take lots of Mounties that want to stay home, I’ll probably lateral in whatever scheme they propose for my position level. But it won’t survive contact as designed.

I would have the RCMP out of all contract policing. But it has to be done in phases. In my present province I deal with this on a smaller scale with some quasi-provincial agencies. When the bills start coming in the governments balk. Because we are way cheaper than the fix. WAY. Not even including salaries.

So, there are provinces where the RCMP does all court security and inter hospital mental health transport. So there are no systems ready to truly deal with the unintended consequence of the absence of Mounties- municipal and provincial agencies won’t take those tastings (rightfully) so right away there is a vacuum- as an example. There are numerous other federal functions and provincial functions that are written in provincial statutes that ask for Mounties- specifically. Not police officers.

This can be changed- but the heads of other forces then renegotiate positions immediately. More cost. Or the creation of a new agency.

The Alberta plan also creates regional forces and municipal forces where they don’t want the APP, so there’s nuance there too,

The plan, as presented to Albertans is juvenile. Like crayons on construction paper juvenile.
 
So it seems to me there are very good reasons to support the Surrey transition and the Alberta Provincial Police initiative. The Quebec and Ontario example seems to be functioning, so I don't understand why there is such opposition to that. The surplus RCMP from Surrey and Alberta who would rather remain mounties could then be used to backfill all of those understaffed GD locations wherever they may be. Seems like a win for everyone.

Redfive, do you know the general feelings of the RCMP membership in Alberta about the APP initiative?

I can't speak personally to Alberta, but if its anything like Surrey there will be a large group who badges over immediately in order to preserve some semblance of certainty for their future, another group who make the decision once more facts are known, there will be the group that feels like they've been/are going to be screwed by the RCMP and badge over out of spite, and the people who want to stay with the RCMP. I cant say for sure because I don't have the official numbers but I would say a third of Surrey Detachment left, and likely a full 90-95% of SPS is former RCMP.

To bring that back to my comment, if you scale this up from a city to a Province, IE "ok well I can't work in this city when this is done but I can work in the next one over", moving an entire Province is not the same. I suspect were this to go through, the RCMP would not retain even a quarter of the members in the Province. Where the extra bodies would come from for the APP to make up that extra quarter plus all the extra positions that have been promised for rural policing? Good luck. Nobody can recruit these days because nobody wants to be a cop. Even when you're the highest paying and newest police force on the block.
 
This breakdown isnt bad-


This is years into the transition. They have 250 police officers.

And the transition will happen- there is a weird belief out there it won’t or it will collapse. I don’t believe that will be allowed. It would have policing repercussions across the country,
 
They go down, while the multi-charged/sentenced/released gang banger walks free to bang/kill again? πŸ€·πŸ»β€β™‚οΈ
Both should be in jail. The law is the law, as much as I would like to concealed carry I don’t because the government has made it illegal. If he can’t follow the law himself, how can we expect him to enforce it?
 
They go down, while the multi-charged/sentenced/released gang banger walks free to bang/kill again? πŸ€·πŸ»β€β™‚οΈ
The article says nothing about the accused Mountie being retained in custody.

Gang banger gets arrested with a loaded restricted handgun in their car. Gets charged with unauthorized possession etc. Released to appear in court at a later date.

Off-duty Mountie gets arrested with a loaded restricted handgun in their car. Gets charged with unauthorized possession etc. Released to appear in court at a later date.

I would suspect that neither had a PAL (unauthorized possession).
 
The article says nothing about the accused Mountie being retained in custody.

Gang banger gets arrested with a loaded restricted handgun in their car. Gets charged with unauthorized possession etc. Released to appear in court at a later date.

Off-duty Mountie gets arrested with a loaded restricted handgun in their car. Gets charged with unauthorized possession etc. Released to appear in court at a later date.

I would suspect that neither had a PAL (unauthorized possession).
Your off duty LE carry laws are retarded.
If a LEO is allowed to carry on duty, and they want to carry off duty, they should simply be held to the same standard of behavior as on duty carry (no drinking etc).
 
Back
Top