Refine by MP, party, committee, province, or result type.

Results 1-15 of 28
Sorted by relevance | Sort by date: newest first / oldest first

Public Safety committee  The changes proposed in Bill C-42 in no way impact on public safety. They merely reduce the amount of red tape that a firearms owner who wishes to transport his firearm must undergo, and the amount of bureaucratic busyness that is imposed on the chief firearms officer. The police

April 30th, 2015Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser

Public Safety committee  Speaking for myself, I definitely agree with you. I think this is a common-sense bill, and strengthening the restrictions on people who have been convicted of domestic abuse from owning or possessing firearms is an excellent idea.

April 30th, 2015Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser

Public Safety committee  I would think right now that it is indeed necessary and proper for the minister and by implication cabinet to have final discretionary power over such decisions. They should of course be advised by a technical committee who knows the details, but it is in fact a decision that sho

April 30th, 2015Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser

Public Safety committee  Thank you for your question. I think it is an excellent idea and it would encourage public safety to allow and encourage people to take these kinds of courses. That is not always possible in physical locations, particularly small towns. For example, in British Columbia we have h

April 30th, 2015Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser

Public Safety committee  Thank you very much for your question. I am exceedingly concerned about access to federal firearms safety courses, or firearms safety courses in general, in the rural parts of Canada, certainly for the native bands, the residents who live on small ranches and small farms, and th

April 30th, 2015Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser

Public Safety committee  No, I do not think that any of the changes in Bill C-42 would increase the danger to women or children through guns. At the present time, only 2% of accused murderers have any kind of a firearms licence. That's a PAL, POL, or the old FAC. So this is very small group of people and

April 30th, 2015Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser

Public Safety committee  Good morning. This works fine for me.

April 30th, 2015Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser

Public Safety committee  Thank you very much for inviting me here. It's a pleasure to present my views to the committee. First of all, I would like to congratulate the government for honouring its promises to reduce red tape for law-abiding firearms owners. I would like to make two points this morning.

April 30th, 2015Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser

November 24th, 2011Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser

Public Safety committee  In terms of actual number of suicides, the numbers, as you correctly state, are increasing. In 1991 there were 3,593 suicides in Canada. In 2008, in the most recent number, there were 3,700. As you also realize, the population in Canada has increased substantially since 1991, so

November 24th, 2011Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser

Public Safety committee  That's correct.

November 24th, 2011Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser

Public Safety committee  The population has increased, as you know.

November 24th, 2011Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser

Public Safety committee  You notice they did not say that the firearms were involved in the homicide.... Many houses outside of urban areas have firearms in them. If the person committed suicide with a rope, a knife, gas, whatever, the fact that there is a firearm in the house is as instructive as if the

November 24th, 2011Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser

Public Safety committee  Suicide researchers around the world dispute the argument that firearms are linked to suicide, that firearms ownership or access is associated with suicide rates. As you know, we have a serious social problem in Canada with aboriginal communities. They prefer hanging to shooting,

November 24th, 2011Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser

Public Safety committee  Do I believe in minimum sentencing...? I think Canada would be safer if we put serious and repeat offenders in jail for a longer period of time. That also gives them access to rehabilitative programs, so yes, I support--

November 24th, 2011Committee meeting

Dr. Gary Mauser