Canada's current firearms baseline includes the Firearms Act, RCMP Canadian Firearms Program administration, Criminal Code firearm offences and prohibitions, and Alberta Chief Firearms Office functions within the Canadian framework.source supportedmedium risk
/ Claims and evidence
What would happen to firearms laws, gun licensing, and restricted-weapon rules?
Key claims used in this dossier, paired with the sources that support them. Claim status and risk labels come from the public claim ledger for this topic.
An independent Alberta could choose a different firearms policy direction, but licences, restricted-firearm records, authorizations, offences, prohibitions, safe-storage rules, and enforcement authority would need explicit day-one continuity rules.inferencehigh risk
The pro-independence case is strongest when it proposes continuity first and policy reform second, including draft statutes, licensing operations, data arrangements, classification tables, and public owner guidance.inferencemedium risk
The anti-independence or pro-federation case is strongest when it identifies specific transition risks in licensing data, RCMP program functions, criminal-law provisions, police and court enforcement, imports, exports, and cross-border recognition.inferencehigh risk
Uncertainty remains high until public documents show firearms-transition legislation, administrative capacity, data access, police and court protocols, border agreements, classification proposals, and readiness review.inferencehigh risk