Interesting Conversation with CFC

To take this logic even further: 100% of the shots fired out of each of my guns is target shooting. Regardless of what I'm shooting at: that is my target.

-ivan-
p.s. It does occur to me that if I ever DO have an accidental discharge: then THAT would be illegal, as I would not technically have had a target in mind for that shot.

Genius. You’ve opened my mind sir!
 
I think when faced with what must at times seem like stupid questions from the hand wringing gun owners amongst us, the CFC/CFO staff take the opportunity to mind-f***.
They give out information like this and then log into CGN to see how soon a thread will be started and how long it'll go on for.
They probably have a pool of some sort organized.... Winner gets to knock off early on Friday.
 
I think when faced with what must at times seem like stupid questions from the hand wringing gun owners amongst us, the CFC/CFO staff take the opportunity to mind-f***.
They give out information like this and then log into CGN to see how soon a thread will be started and how long it'll go on for.
They probably have a pool of some sort organized.... Winner gets to knock off early on Friday.

I can see that happening on a slow day LOL
 
Tragic mistake: You go to the range with the intention of target shooting, and say "Oh look, a competition!".
Result: 2 years in pokey with Mister Big.

I must call the CFC and ask if it it legal to shoot 9mm Luger in a 9mm Parabellum pistol. I bet it isn't.
 
The last time I called in for a STATT, I was asking if I could pick up my gun at the post office and go straight to a range, since mt LTATT says I can transport to ranges.

The Alberta CFO rep, told me I should just be safe and get the STATT from Post Office to home, so there is paper trail of me getting my gun back.

The kicker, when I called into the CFC, I was transferred to my provincial CFO... It was answered by another rep in Miramichi. I grew up in that city, my mother worked there and friends and family still work there.
 
Bill C-42 makes no mention of target shooting or competition shooting which is how the individual CFO offices get to exercise some modicum of authority in making us apply for a separate LTATT.

It actually does make mention of target shooting AND competitions.
2003, c. 8, s. 16(3)
6. Subsection 19(2) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Target practice or competition
(1.1) In the case of an authorization to transport issued for a reason referred to in paragraph (1)(a) within the province where the holder of the authorization resides, the specified places must include all shooting clubs and shooting ranges that are approved under section 29 and that are located in that province.

1. Transportation of restricted firearms and/or prohibited handguns (12(6.1)) of
the Firearms Act) possessed for the purpose of target practice to and from all
shooting clubs and ranges approved under section 29 of the Firearms Act
Notes:

All target shooters who presently hold a long-term ATT (LT-ATT) for the purpose of target shooting will have this condition automatically added electronically to their licence on September 2. This also applies to holders of LT-ATTs who have an approved “private range”.
The condition allows the licencee to transport their own firearms to/ from an approved shooting club/ shooting range.
Individuals who have acquired a restricted firearm (or prohibited handgun) for the purpose of target shooting, but who are not presently LT-ATT holders, and who do not presently belong to an approved shooting club in Ontario, will not have this condition automatically added on September 2. This condition (as well as all of the other 5 conditions) will be added upon:
Renewal of their licence;
Acquisition of a subsequent restricted firearm or prohibited handgun for the purposes of target shooting; or
If they call requesting for this condition to be added or to request an ATT to go anywhere permitted by law.
Approved shooting ranges are privately operated by approved shooting clubs. The executive of such clubs continues to have the independent authority to determine who will be permitted access to their facility, to determine who will be allowed to bring and use firearms at their facility, and to determine the terms of facility guest use generally. Operators of approved shooting ranges in Ontario continue to be responsible for ensuring that all users of the range are sufficiently proficient in the safe handling and use of firearms, and that the conditions of the particular facility’s Range Approval are followed by all members and guests.
 
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Tragic mistake: You go to the range with the intention of target shooting, and say "Oh look, a competition!".
Result: 2 years in pokey with Mister Big.

I must call the CFC and ask if it it legal to shoot 9mm Luger in a 9mm Parabellum pistol. I bet it isn't.

Confuse them more, ask about 9 x 19 mm.
 
That reminds me of the old joke about hockey - I went to fight once and a hockey game broke out, only in this scenario you could always tell the judge, your honour, I went to a target range and a competition broke out.
 
So, I just had an interesting conversation with the Canadian Firearms Centre......apparently our C-42 LTATT that is attached to our PAL is NOT valid for IPSC, IDPA, SCCA, SASS or any of the other acronym competitions. According to the gentleman I was speaking with the C-42 covers our transportation to and from the range for target practice, but NOT for competition. I now have a separate paper LTATT that covers all IPSC competitions in Alberta and Manitoba. On the plus side, he said he was going to send emails requesting clarification as to why I can go to a range on Friday to practice, but not go to the same range on Saturday/Sunday to compete. LET'S FLOOD THEM WITH LTATT REQUESTS!!!!!

Not sure what prompted you to have this conversation with the CFC, but gun owners would do themselves a big favour by not engaging in such fallacious conversations with the CFC. Asking the CFC call center for legal opinions on the criminal code and firearms act is like asking the Walmart greeter about Corporate tax law.

Flooding them with LTATTs requests, whether you need one or not, simply justifies their salaries, and ties up the phone lines for other legitimate business, like people trying to get a license issued. ITs best to talk to the CFC as little as humanly possible.

This came from the CFC in Miramichi.
Yes, I did get a name, but I won't post it here.
Who do you believe, an internet forum, or the Government agents in charge of disseminating the information? I'm not taking any risks personally.

Given the choice, I would take the collective wisdom of gun nuts over government agents 100% of the time. The government agents can't even give you consistent answer about how they will act upon the law, let alone interpret what the law actually says.

And in reading the Firearms act, I cannot find competitive shooting mentioned anywhere other than it must be to a range approved under section 29.

Methinks I was told false information.

Glad you were able to come to that conclusion on your own. Knowing the CFC's position on something is usually amusing, but rarely consistent with either the law or how it will be enforced on the street with your local Law Enforcement officers, who typically don't give two schitts about ATTs. If you have a license, you probably aren't the droids they are looking for.

Bill C-42 makes no mention of target shooting or competition shooting which is how the individual CFO offices get to exercise some modicum of authority in making us apply for a separate LTATT.

You shouldn't be reading C-42. C-42 was an act that amended the Firearms Act. C42 does not stand on its own. You should be reading the current and in force version of the firearms act, which does make mention of target shooting and competition. http://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/F-11.6/page-4.html#h-11

19 (1) An individual who holds a licence authorizing the individual to possess prohibited firearms or restricted firearms may be authorized to transport a particular prohibited firearm or restricted firearm between two or more specified places for any good and sufficient reason, including, without restricting the generality of the foregoing,

(a) for use in target practice, or a target shooting competition, under specified conditions or under the auspices of a shooting club or shooting range that is approved under section 29;...

In all other places in the Firearms Act where section 19, 19(1), or 19(1)(A) are mentioned, no further distinction is made between practice and competition. It is a distinction without a meaningful difference, and for all intents and purposes under the law, they are the same.

The only way an ATT issued for the purposes of practice would NOT include competition, is if for some reason the CFO specifically noted on YOUR ATT that competition was not included.

It actually does make mention of target shooting AND competitions.
2003, c. 8, s. 16(3)
6. Subsection 19(2) of the Act is replaced by the following:
Target practice or competition
(1.1) In the case of an authorization to transport issued for a reason referred to in paragraph (1)(a) within the province where the holder of the authorization resides, the specified places must include all shooting clubs and shooting ranges that are approved under section 29 and that are located in that province.

1. Transportation of restricted firearms and/or prohibited handguns (12(6.1)) of
the Firearms Act) possessed for the purpose of target practice to and from all
shooting clubs and ranges approved under section 29 of the Firearms Act
Notes:

All target shooters who presently hold a long-term ATT (LT-ATT) for the purpose of target shooting will have this condition automatically added electronically to their licence on September 2. This also applies to holders of LT-ATTs who have an approved “private range”.
The condition allows the licencee to transport their own firearms to/ from an approved shooting club/ shooting range.
Individuals who have acquired a restricted firearm (or prohibited handgun) for the purpose of target shooting, but who are not presently LT-ATT holders, and who do not presently belong to an approved shooting club in Ontario, will not have this condition automatically added on September 2. This condition (as well as all of the other 5 conditions) will be added upon:
Renewal of their licence;
Acquisition of a subsequent restricted firearm or prohibited handgun for the purposes of target shooting; or
If they call requesting for this condition to be added or to request an ATT to go anywhere permitted by law.
Approved shooting ranges are privately operated by approved shooting clubs. The executive of such clubs continues to have the independent authority to determine who will be permitted access to their facility, to determine who will be allowed to bring and use firearms at their facility, and to determine the terms of facility guest use generally. Operators of approved shooting ranges in Ontario continue to be responsible for ensuring that all users of the range are sufficiently proficient in the safe handling and use of firearms, and that the conditions of the particular facility’s Range Approval are followed by all members and guests.

Most of what you quoted isn't even the act itself, but is some non-legal marketing material published with the bill. In any event, as I said, C-42 was an amender, not a standalone bill. Read the Firearms Act.
 
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That's hilarious.

On a related note, I just realized my LTATT authorizes me to transport all of my firearms that are "registered to the licence holder within their province of residence" (Alberta), "to and from ALL shooting clubs and ranges approved under section 29 of the Firearms act" (anywhere in the country).

And so long as I do some target shooting before, after or during the competition I would not worry about having another piece of paper to attend SASS etc.

You may want to get that clarified. Recent LTATTs a seem to restrict to the Province where you reside?
 
You may want to get that clarified. Recent LTATTs a seem to restrict to the Province where you reside?

I was joking - but if you were charged with a criminal offence the benefit of the doubt on the interpretation of a sentence on a piece of paper authorizing you to commit what would otherwise be a crime would go to the benefit of the accused.

This is why so much of our firearms law is garbage - what is a variant of a prohibited firearm, etc. etc..
 
I was joking - but if you were charged with a criminal offence the benefit of the doubt on the interpretation of a sentence on a piece of paper authorizing you to commit what would otherwise be a crime would go to the benefit of the accused.

This is why so much of our firearms law is garbage - what is a variant of a prohibited firearm, etc. etc..

You are correct about benefit of the doubt going to the accused, however you are incorrect as to there being any doubt.

With respect to any ATT issued automatically as license conditions per S19(1) of the Firearms Act, Section 19(1.1) says:
(1.1) In the case of an authorization to transport issued for a reason referred to in paragraph (1)(a) within the province where the holder of the authorization resides, the specified places must include all shooting clubs and shooting ranges that are approved under section 29 and that are located in that province.

Your ATT might be ambiguous (Personally I don't think it is), but the law that guides the issuance of your ATT is quite clear. Unless expressly stating otherwise, your ATT is valid to all ranges in the province of your residence only.
 
This came from the CFC in Miramichi.
Yes, I did get a name, but I won't post it here.
Who do you believe, an internet forum, or the Government agents in charge of disseminating the information? I'm not taking any risks personally.

Neither

The law has the answers you seek. The problem is most people want someone else to tell them what to do so they can rationalize that they are not responsible for their actions.

If you have C-42 special conditions you can take your restriceds to any section 29 range in your province of residence at any time for any reason you please.

Shawn
 
And further to the conversation.....I just spoke with the CFO Office. Bill C-42 amended the Firearms Act and therefore supersedes it. Bill C-42 makes no mention of competition shooting and as such a LTATT for IPSC competitions must be acquired. Your PAL does not cover the travel to and from the competition. I now have a separate LTATT that covers Manitoba through BC just for IPSC Competition.

You are mixing up two different things

C-42 is province of residence only. You wanted more than one province.

You can go to any range in your home province for any reason you want at any time you want, including competition.

Shawn
 
Bill C-42 makes no mention of target shooting or competition shooting which is how the individual CFO offices get to exercise some modicum of authority in making us apply for a separate LTATT.

No its not. The fact that C-42 does not set limits makes it legal for you to do it.

They have no authority to make you apply for an ATT that is already covered by the conditions attached to your RPAL

Shawn
 
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