Talk about rip-off Britain.

UKworkshop.co.uk

Help Support UKworkshop.co.uk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

ey_tony

Established Member
Joined
2 Nov 2015
Messages
792
Reaction score
778
Location
North Yorkshire
My firearm and shotgun certificates are due for their 5 year renewal at the end of next month and according the local police website processing can take up to two weeks so today I thought I'd better get my skates on and pop down to my local doctor's surgery and hand in the forms which can be downloaded from the local police force's web site and ask for one of the doctors at my practice to sign the forms indicating that I have no health issues, either mental or physical which would exclude me for continuing firearm possession. I know I have absolutely no issues which would preclude me from gun ownership so pretty straight forward really.

It used to be that I simply filled in a form which included the names of two referees and the name of my doctor and the practice at which he worked and I presume they made a call to the practice but whatever happened, I paid a fixed fee (£65.00 I believe) for the joint (coterminous) renewal of both my shotgun and firearm certificates and nothing more was heard until a local police officer delivered the new certificate and checked the gun serial numbers I own and where I stored them.

The process has now gone online which they claim is to save money so it requires the applicant to download the relevant forms and have them signed by one's doctor which should take in essence a few minutes at most but for this simple service I was told by the receptionist that I had to pay £110.00 up front. I expected to pay a fair fee for the simple service but £110.00, c'mon it's a rip off.

I was also informed by the receptionist that as the doctors were so busy with private work it could take up to 30 days before I would receive the completed forms. That could mean me being late with my application which in turn would require me to store the guns at the firearm club of which I've been a member for 35 years. Not a real hardship but just another issue that need not arise. I realise that with living in a rural area there are bound to be higher numbers of firearm/shotgun applications than other areas so maybe that's why it's so difficult to get a doctor's appointment these days...they're too busy making money filling out forms.

I don't use my guns for any form of killing and it's only paper targets at which I shoot so to be honest I think it's like everything else in the UK just another rip off where they milk every penny from you that they can.
 
My firearm and shotgun certificates are due for their 5 year renewal at the end of next month and according the local police website processing can take up to two weeks so today I thought I'd better get my skates on and pop down to my local doctor's surgery and hand in the forms which can be downloaded from the local police force's web site and ask for one of the doctors at my practice to sign the forms indicating that I have no health issues, either mental or physical which would exclude me for continuing firearm possession. I know I have absolutely no issues which would preclude me from gun ownership so pretty straight forward really.

It used to be that I simply filled in a form which included the names of two referees and the name of my doctor and the practice at which he worked and I presume they made a call to the practice but whatever happened, I paid a fixed fee (£65.00 I believe) for the joint (coterminous) renewal of both my shotgun and firearm certificates and nothing more was heard until a local police officer delivered the new certificate and checked the gun serial numbers I own and where I stored them.

The process has now gone online which they claim is to save money so it requires the applicant to download the relevant forms and have them signed by one's doctor which should take in essence a few minutes at most but for this simple service I was told by the receptionist that I had to pay £110.00 up front. I expected to pay a fair fee for the simple service but £110.00, c'mon it's a rip off.

I was also informed by the receptionist that as the doctors were so busy with private work it could take up to 30 days before I would receive the completed forms. That could mean me being late with my application which in turn would require me to store the guns at the firearm club of which I've been a member for 35 years. Not a real hardship but just another issue that need not arise. I realise that with living in a rural area there are bound to be higher numbers of firearm/shotgun applications than other areas so maybe that's why it's so difficult to get a doctor's appointment these days...they're too busy making money filling out forms.

I don't use my guns for any form of killing and it's only paper targets at which I shoot so to be honest I think it's like everything else in the UK just another rip off where they milk every penny from you that they can.
They let you have guns Tony? Actual real ones?

: )
 
Somerset and Avon quoted 14 months to a friend for a new application....

Adidat
I know that new applications have always taken quite a while wherever you live but renewals have always been fairly quick. If I had the doctor's report to send in with my application I could have my renewed licences in my hands within two weeks.
It sounds like the doctor's report will hold things up judging by the receptionist's comment. By the looks of it it's a nice little earner for doctors if they're so busy with it. They don't even have to comment on someone's suitability to own firearms, they only have to verify whether or not someone has health issues ( mental or physical) which would make their gun ownership unsafe.
It's the police's responsibility to judge whether someone is suitable to own guns.
 
When did they bring in the doctor's reference on renewal ? I'm sure that it used only to need your referees to renew.

I did visit a Doctor in Paris many years ago as part of the application to a club over there. He actually conducted a sensible physical examination relevant to the sport so you felt like you received something for the (quite reasonable) consultation fee.
 
When did they bring in the doctor's reference on renewal ? I'm sure that it used only to need your referees to renew.

I did visit a Doctor in Paris many years ago as part of the application to a club over there. He actually conducted a sensible physical examination relevant to the sport so you felt like you received something for the (quite reasonable) consultation fee.
It's almost 5 years since I last renewed my licence under the old system but from what I can gather the new online application system including the doctor's reference was introduced in the last 12 months.
The firearms club of which I've been a member since around 1990 must report anyone who doesn't have a set minimum number of visits annually. I don't shoot over land as I don't enjoy killing birds or animals so I have to be a member of a suitable club in order to maintain my firearms and shotgun licences.

I have several guns including a centrefire Winchester 94 underlever rifle which you see in every cowboy film. I used to own a full range of handguns from .22 rimfire to .357 & .44 magnums before they were banned.

These days I quite enjoy shooting at targets with air pistols at 50 metres...not quite as lively as a .357 or .44 but an awful lot cheaper to run and just as much fun. :)
 
... now gone online which they claim is to save money so it requires the applicant to download the relevant forms and have them signed by one's doctor which should take in essence a few minutes at most ....
Download the necessary forms, print them, fill in whatever you might need to, if anything, get a doctor's appointment for a perhaps trifling condition, see doc about your, ahem, illness, then say, "Oh, by the by could you just sign this form for me whilst I'm here, ta much." Slainte.
 
Download the necessary forms, print them, fill in whatever you might need to, if anything, get a doctor's appointment for a perhaps trifling condition, see doc about your, ahem, illness, then say, "Oh, by the by could you just sign this form for me whilst I'm here, ta much." Slainte.
I did think about doing that though I thought I'd do it the correct way but after paying £110.00 for what is effectively the doctor's signature, I'd wished I had done it.
 
Back
Top