1. I know the Barnes case, so just to make sure, stackons are considered safes? (No further lock needed on restricted) 2. Disregard 3. Are there any of you out there that play with the Beowulf 50 mags and disregard the RCMP and just follow what the law says instead? If so, where can I buy one pinned at 5? Or the 25/25 10/22. 4. Regarding the daily CPIC checks, do only violent/drug trafficking instances initiate a call from my CFO? 5. In my safety course the instructor told us to keep ammo somewhere that is well ventilated. Do any of you do that? 6. What if I’m coming back from the range with my restricted and I get a call from the girlfriend saying that she’s very sick and needs to be picked up? What happens to my “direct route”? 7. Disregard 8. How many LAR 15 magazines should I buy?
My comment:
Re. the "
...keep ammo somewhere that is well ventilated...", the basis for the comment was compliance with the Explosives Act and Regulations. If you read the Explosives Act and the Regulations, you'll understand your 'small-arms ammunition' (including 'safety cartridge', primer, and powder) storage responsibilities. In Canada, a firearms owner must be functionally conversant with the Criminal Code and Regulations, the Firearms Act and Regulations, the Explosives Act and Regulations, and - at a minimum - the firearms owner's respective provincial wildlife/hunting acts(s) and regulations. Frankly, the CFSC is too short to be able to adequately cover all of the relevant acts and regulations that a responsible firearms owner must know. A fireams owner must take the responsibility to read, to study, and - as necessary - to reference these acts and regulations, just in order to be certain to remain in compliance; while membership in a firearms-rights advocacy organization (such as the NFA, or CSSA/CILA) will be helpful to toward that end, the bottom line is that - in Canada - a firearms owner must accept that responsibility.
Re. the "
...direct route...", the basis for the comment was compliance with the Authorization To Transport Regulations (made pursuant to the Firearms Act). If you read the Authorization To Transport regulations, and you also read the text of your own ATTs, you'll understand your freedoms, your restrictions, and a process whereby you can obtain more freedoms (as necessary). In Canada, a firearms owner must be functionally conversant with the Criminal Code and Regulations, the Firearms Act and Regulations, the Explosives Act and Regulations, and - at a minimum - the firearms owner's respective provincial wildlife/hunting acts(s) and regulations. Frankly, the CFSC is too short to be able to adequately cover all of the relevant acts and regulations that a responsible firearms owner must know. A fireams owner must take the responsibility to read, to study, and - as necessary - to reference these acts and regulations, just in order to be certain to remain in compliance; while membership in a firearms-rights advocacy organization (such as the NFA, or CSSA/CILA) will be helpful to toward that end, the bottom line is that - in Canada - a firearms owner must accept that responsibility.
Criminal Code (R.S.C., 1985, c. C-46)
<https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/C-46/>
Firearms Act (S.C. 1995, c. 39)
<https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/F-11.6/>
Explosives Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. E-17)
<https://laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/E-17/>