Overview
- The federal pilot targets about 200 prohibited assault‑style firearms over six weeks in select Cape Breton areas, with an online declaration portal opening Oct. 1 and appointments handled by local police.
- Officials say the program will expand nationwide later this fall through a declaration period, with collection and compensation to follow in 2026.
- Alberta’s justice and public safety ministers directed that the buyback not be enforced in the province, saying it will not be an enforcement priority for police.
- Cape Breton Regional Police agreed to participate in the pilot, while the Ontario Provincial Police have said they will not directly take part.
- Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree called his leaked remarks “misguided” after audio captured him doubting enforcement and offering to bail out a non‑compliant owner, as critics assailed the $742‑million capped program covering roughly 2,500 models banned since 2020.