Nothing but apply a rubberstamp. The really stupid thing about our system is that once the transfer is "sent to the province" it's already defacto approved by the feds. So sending it to the CFO is just a pointless bureaucratic exercise in obfuscation and delay.
Transfer started April 4.
Received email today from Tenda that was approved and a second email 5 minutes later with canpar tracking number.
9 weeks total from order to ship date.
Guessing it will only get worse unless they somehow start crushing 2 weeks of transfers every week.. If this trend keeps up we are going to be at 3 months waits soon which is insane
Does anyone remember the transfer waits ever being this long for this length of time?
Is that all they do? I just find that hard to believe. I have NO idea what they do... but if that's it then the 3 people approving transfers in theory should be able to process a week of transfers every day.
That being said I can't imagine what else they are doing considering it already went through the RCMP, both licenses valid... it shouldn't be rocket science
Well, they look for patterns -- someone buying an inordinate amount within a certain timeframe, someone buying multiple units of the same thing or same cailbre, things like that.
That having been said, there's zero reason an entry level programmer cannot write a script for whatever it is they're looking for, and have those transactions automatically flagged for further review. But then again, the Ontario system is still pen and paper lol.... retailers have this ledger they keep all sales records on & for gov't audit purposes. Apparently the government does not yet trust computers. Either that or they're grossly incompetent, one or the other...
I was just googling for some information, then I saw the RCMP page about "Registration" and "Verification" (links below). What caught my eye is that apparently there is a difference if a firearm is being registered for the first time or not. That got me thinking---could it be that "previously owned" firearms are already "verified" and there is less work to do by CFO to approve a transfer, while new firearms require extra steps and take longer? Then again, what constitutes "new"---are brand new guns that are sold in a store already "verified" and "registered" to the business itself, or not. Just wondering if anyone has noticed some pattern along those lines, maybe it takes less time to get a used restricted approved than a new one.
Here are the two links:
https://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/en/firearms/registration
https://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/en/firearms/verification
I was just googling for some information, then I saw the RCMP page about "Registration" and "Verification" (links below). What caught my eye is that apparently there is a difference if a firearm is being registered for the first time or not. That got me thinking---could it be that "previously owned" firearms are already "verified" and there is less work to do by CFO to approve a transfer, while new firearms require extra steps and take longer? Then again, what constitutes "new"---are brand new guns that are sold in a store already "verified" and "registered" to the business itself, or not. Just wondering if anyone has noticed some pattern along those lines, maybe it takes less time to get a used restricted approved than a new one.
Here are the two links:
https://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/en/firearms/registration
https://www.rcmp-grc.gc.ca/en/firearms/verification
Anyone get theirs today?
It’s too early, CFO hasn’t had their lunch yet
apr 22 here...