(AP Photo/Eric Risberg)
Airsofters aren’t generally part of the Second Amendment community. Some happen to also own real firearms, but most airsofters are folks who like to play war. Rather than playing with sticks are toy guns like many of us did when we were kids, they use a weapon that fires a small projectile that eliminates the ageless debate of whether someone got someone else or not.
However, the pastime may be coming to an abrupt end up in Canada.
A new gun control bill from the federal government could spell the end of the Airsoft gun industry.
(Cache Tactical Supply/Facebook)
A new gun control bill from the federal government could spell the end of the Airsoft gun industry.
Bill C-21, which has not yet passed, would ban “mid-velocity replica firearms.”
The text of the bill reads:
“Update the Criminal Code to ensure that any device, including an unregulated airgun that looks exactly like a conventional regulated firearm (i.e., shoots over 500 feet per second), is prohibited for the purposes of import, export, sale and transfer.
Current owners may keep their ‘replicas’ but cannot transfer them to anyone else.
No further ‘replica’ firearms could be imported into, or sold/transferred in Canada.
Aaron Straus
SALAMANCA Salamanca Central School’s instructional coach, Aaron Straus, was recently honored with the 2020 Outstanding Leader Award from the NYCATE Conference, which was held virtually this year due to the pandemic.
The award program identifies educators from across the state who have had a great impact on their students in K-12 public schools where technology integration can be transformative. Straus was one of two educators in Western New York to accept the leadership branch of the award, since its inception in 2012.
“I am deeply honored and humbled to receive this accolade from NYSCATE,” Straus said. “it is a testament to our district’s philosophy that educational success can be fully realized when technology- instruction is established, cultivated, and maintained.”