I think the legislation you guys are referring to is Part II (Fortified Buildings), S37 and S43 of the
SAFER COMMUNITIES AND NEIGHBOURHOODS ACT (2007). For the record, it can be
any building, not just a house. Also, even a house with window (security) bars can be included. But the building
first has to be designated as such under S43, before any orders can be issued.
In Calgary the history of this legislation goes back as far as December 20, 1974 (nicknamed Black Friday) when Detective Boyd Davidson was killed by a man from a fortified position inside a garage in Ramsey. The police had to get special permission from Ottawa and brought in an armoured vehicle from the military to breach the building. There is still a park in south Calgary in his memory I believe. The article is here:
https://calgaryherald.com/news/local-news/calgary-black-friday-siege
Detective Boyd Davidson was my father-in-law's partner. Two calls came into the downtown precinct at the same time that day. My father-in-law took one call, Detective Davidson took the other. It was his last call ever. For those of you that remember the old Crown Surplus Military Store in Ramsey, the property where the tragedy occurred can be seen across the tracks from behind the store. It backed on to the unused triangle land sliver next to the railway tracks on an embankment.
It's one of those pieces of legislation rarely used unless the police are regular visitors to your property and you have gang affiliations. (This forum doesn't count). It is a bigger deal for fire department access in a
house, and might be flagged by an inspector during renovations. But it would be rare. Technically window bars fall into the same category. There is a huge difference between someone strengthening their door jam and someone using plate steel on the entire door. If beefing up your garage door jam is what makes you feel better, I wouldn't lose sleep over the legislation. But I would also have an alarm system. As satisfying as it may be, booby traps of any type are asking for trouble. Expect a glitter bomb Amazon lawsuit to be in the news at some point.