DFO has cut off the sport fishery to provide extinction level chinook to extinction level orcas, a plan of more of the same, that will see both salmon and orcas move to extinction.
A different plan is required if we are to save salmon, orcas and BC business. A new study has documented the negative effects already impinging businesses that rely on sport fishing - less than 3 months after the draconian measures have been instituted. I can tell you that I spend about $10K a year to keep my boat running, moored, insured, fueled, perform annual maintenance as well as expenditure on items that wear out, like canvases and motors. Who is going to pump 10 grand into the economy if you can't keep a fish?
Here is my plan for bringing back chinook and orcas: freshwater habitat restoration and immediate netpens of 24 million chinook, every year: http://fishfarmnews.blogspot.com/2018/05/dfo-salmon-and-killer-whales.html. If they were marked, as well as sterilized, we could be fishing immediately for fish that have no effect on spawning beds. Work on the Fraser chinook is needed too, as are measures to counteract the effects of climate change.
Now, another plan has been put together, particularly by businesses that are suffering the 50 year poor management by DFO. The Chamber of Commerce has done a study to come up with the stats. 90% of businesses in the sector are down.
I seldomly reprint a whole document, but you should read it all, and as it came to me as a PDF, I can't attach that to this post. The point is to now send notes to DFO, Wilkinson, Trudeau and your MP. More information can be obtained from Tom Davis, who most fishers will know. He says: "The key thing is to make your opinion known. if you have any
questions or need clarification on the contents of the document you can contact
me at thomascd1948@gmail.com. Thank
you for taking time to read this."
Recommendations for Restoring Southern British Columbia’s Public
Chinook Fishery
(i)
- Transition to Mark
Selective Fishing (MSF) for the public fishery during the recovery of wild Chinook stocks of concern;
(ii)
– Utilize strategic
enhancement in addition to protecting and restoring critical habitat to reverse
Chinook abundance trends; and,
(iii)
- Protect the $1.1 billion
annual public fishery, sustain employment, and maintain the many benefits that
accrue to Canada.
This briefing note has
been prepared by a broad group of concerned southern Vancouver Island citizens. The group includes local fishing,
conservation and advocacy organisations, Sc’ianew First Nation, fishing lodges,
charter captains, fishing tackle manufacturers and retailers. It also includes
salmon habitat and enhancement volunteers and technicians, plus Fisheries,
Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard (DFO) and Provincial biologists.
The
purpose of this document is to recommend viable solutions to restore the
Chinook resource and protect the
socio-economic benefits and jobs related to BC’s $1.1 billion Public
Fishery, while the recovery efforts for certain Chinook stocks and Southern
Resident Killer Whales are in place.
Anglers
by nature are conservationists who recognize the importance of a healthy
environment. This has been demonstrated for decades by thousands of volunteers who have
devoted hundreds of thousands of hours annually toward salmon habitat and
enhancement projects, as well as gifting millions of dollars to the
conservation and enhancement of wild Pacific salmon. Endangered Southern
Resident Killer Whales (SRKWs) benefit from efforts to restore weak runs of
Upper & Middle Fraser River Chinook. The angling public cares about SRKW
wellbeing and supports their recovery.
Currently there is a crisis related to Middle and Upper Fraser Chinook
salmon. These large salmon are known as stream-type Chinook, because they
spend an additional year in freshwater before migrating to sea. Unfortunately, these runs are experiencing a
steady decline due to watershed issues related to human activities and climate
change. In the 1990s these Chinook were
healthy contributors to coastal and in-river fisheries. Southern Resident Killer Whales (SRKW’s)
return to BC waters in the springtime and prey upon these large Chinook salmon
whose migration timing coincides with the whale’s arrival.Over two decades ago, as Fraser stream-type Chinook abundance began to
decline, DFO and the Provincial Government failed to respond quickly or
effectively. A number of small
hatcheries within the Fraser watershed were closed due to financial constraints
and poor salmon returns, and there has been minimal enhancement or habitat
restoration in the region since then.
Instead
of dealing with the issues in the watersheds, DFO relied upon fishery
restrictions and closures as the principal recovery tools. These
restrictions on the public fishery began in 2008 and increased in intensity,
culminating in the current situation where we now have Chinook non-retention
fishing over virtually the whole South Coast region during the bulk of the
critically important May to mid-September Public fishery season.
This
magnitude of seasonal loss of opportunity and the resulting economic hardship,
now being realized, are unsustainable for small regional businesses and could
have been avoided. The recent move
to long periods of Chinook non-retention, when other salmon species are
generally not present for retention, has produced estimates of angler participation
drop of approximately 90%, which far exceeds the pre- regulation DFO
estimate. Public fishery representatives
are deeply concerned that the fishery infrastructure could permanently
collapse. The angling community predicted this outcome and fore-warned the
Fisheries Minister and staff before the April 2019 regulations were announced.
Anglers do not launch or moor boats, invest in extensive maintenance costs,
spend on other angling necessities or book lodge and guided trip services if
they cannot keep a Chinook salmon; and
this has been proven without a doubt during the first two months of Chinook
non-retention regulations.
The quandary for DFO is how to maintain or rebuild wild Chinook stocks
of concern during potentially long salmon
recovery periods, while simultaneously maintaining opportunity for the public
salmon fishery to survive.
Chinook non-retention as a fisheries management policy is unsustainable for the
public fishery. The result will be continued declines of struggling salmon stocks
and the collapse of the Public Chinook fishery that the business infrastructure
and support industry cannot endure. It
is vital that a viable alternative be instituted immediately. We
strongly support the following action plan for recovery of Chinook stocks of concern and the
maintenance of the Public Fishery.
Comparison of
fishing boats moored at Cheanuh Marina on the Sc’ianew (Beecher Bay) First Nation Reserve in East
Sooke (Left picture taken Jun 2018 – right
picture taken May 2019)
(i) Transition to Marked Selective Fisheries
(MSF) for the Public Fishery During the recovery of Wild Chinook Stocks of
Concern:
•
Marked
Selective Fishing is a valuable fisheries management tool that promotes
conservation and protection of threatened wild Chinook & Coho stocks while
allowing controlled opportunities for anglers to retain “enhanced”, and more
abundant, components of the Chinook salmon resource. Chinook MSF must be implemented in Southern
British Columbia waters immediately;
•
The
current South Coast Chinook non-retention regulations do not permit the public
to keep any Chinook whether they originate from healthy wild or productive
hatchery stocks except in a handful of exempted terminal fishing areas.
•
The opportunity
to keep a salmon is fundamental to the success of the Public Chinook Fishery. Under a MSF regime, anglers can keep any
sized hatchery produced Chinook or Coho which is easily identifiable by a
clipped adipose fin, while releasing wild salmon from stocks of concern. This
strategy allows the fishery to continue successfully, while simplifying
potentially complex regional management rules.
•
Releasing
wild (unmarked) Chinook is part of the MSF plan. It requires wild Chinook to be released which allows them to migrate
through the fishing area and back to their home rivers, while permitting
the Public fishery to operate at a sustainable level by retaining adipose
clipped salmon. The release of wild Chinook in ocean fisheries facilitates
Fraser River First Nations access to food, social and ceremonial fishery
requirements;
•
Currently
DFO clips just 10% of hatchery Chinook production annually through the
Salmon Enhancement Program. This low rate of marking must be increased
dramatically and quickly. There are approximately 25,000,000 Chinook raised in
Southern BC hatcheries each year, of which the bulk are produced for harvest
opportunities.
•
Washington
State, according to law, mass marks Chinook and Coho at a 100% rate. Adipose clipped US hatchery production
contributes between 50% and 80% of the abundance of Chinook in key southern BC
angling waters during the spring and early summer key fishing period, but must
be released under the current Chinook non-retention regulation. Washington State has plans to increase
Chinook hatchery production an additional 12 million by 2020. Additional mass
marking of all existing southern BC hatchery Chinook will further increase the
proportion of available adipose-clipped fish for MSF retention opportunities;
and,
•
Transitioning
towards a MSF as soon as possible is a priority component of a well thought out
comprehensive Chinook action plan. This type of initiative will accelerate
wild Chinook recovery, restore reasonable fishing expectations and
opportunities for the public and rebuild confidence in the stability of the
world class Public fishery service infrastructure in Southern British Columbia.
(ii) Utilize Strategic Enhancement Combined with
the Protection and Restoration of Critical Habitat to Reverse Chinook Abundance
Trends:
•
The
strategic enhancement and habitat restoration of Upper and Middle Fraser River
Chinook stocks of concern must take precedence immediately. A multi-faceted
“all tools in the box” approach will be required. These tools include but
are not limited to accelerated habitat restoration, modern Chinook hatchery
production technologies, the use of proven over-wintering protocols, pen
rearing for improved survival rates, water conservation and protection,
research and stock assessment, angler
cooperation and relationship building with 1st nations for the benefit of salmon and those who depend on them, public/private financial investments,
strategic increases in Chinook production, and proper land use and habitat
protections that put salmon first. These goals have not been acted on in any
effective way to date by the DFO and the Provincial government. Aside from
enacting increasingly restrictive fishing regulations over the last decade with
failed outcomes, DFO has ignored progressive solutions to rebuild these
important Fraser River Chinook stocks. The recently announced 5 year joint
Federal/Provincial $142 million salmon recovery fund is a welcome step in the
right direction, but its success will depend on how the money is spent.
•
In the
face of climate change DFO and the Provincial government must shift Chinook
recovery thinking away from methods that were unsuccessful. They must move
towards strategies that embrace new thinking, require decisive and proactive
actions on those stocks that are most likely to be affected by adverse climate
impacts, moderate and preferably reduce predator/prey interactions and
effectively mitigate adverse impacts from increased human activities and
population growth. Partnering with the private sector, including the sharing of
proven technologies, are keys to halting and reversing declines, and will
assist in accelerating the achievement
of successful outcomes.
BC
Chamber of Commerce Survey Data
379 Businesses on Vancouver Island Surveyed
ONE MONTH AFTER NON-RETENTION REGULATION IMPLEMENTED
71%
of businesses have experienced cancelled bookings 22% report business being
down over 50% compared to this time last year
(iii) Protect the $1.1 billion public fishery
infrastructure, sustain employment and maintain the many benefits that accrue
to Canada
Chinook salmon are the backbone of the public
fishery. Chinook are revered around the world as spectacular game fish attracting many
thousands of tourist anglers to BC every year. The resident angler has a long standing cultural
attachment to these salmon, and considers bringing one home for the dinner table as one of the most important
benefits of the overall angling experience;
•
There is
great diversity within the BC Public fishing industry much of it homegrown and
cutting edge. It includes manufacturers, distributors, retailers, boat and
engine sales and maintenance, charter boat and fishing lodge operations. The
bulk of it is 100% BC owned and operated. Much of this infrastructure is
located in remote communities where other job opportunities are scarce. This $1
billion business has historically grown out of the desire to catch, and more
importantly, retain a Chinook salmon;
•
The
disintegration of the Public Fishery and its infrastructure must be
avoided. In 2019 DFO badly
miscalculated the consequences of a Chinook non-retention policy that virtually
eliminated Chinook fishing expectation and opportunity. This sent out a message
that BC is closed to fishing. The impact will affect most of the Province’s
south coast waters for at least two thirds of the peak fishing period. Few
businesses can realistically survive this type of unnecessary regulatory attack
for more than one season. It could have been avoided because there are already
sufficient adipose clipped Chinook in south coast waters to support a limited
Selective Mark Fishery.
BC Chamber of Commerce Survey Data
379 Businesses on Vancouver Island Surveyed
ONE MONTH AFTER NON-RETENTION REGULATION IMPLEMENTED
96% of businesses say they will lose customers and clients 37% will have to lay off staff 46% feel the future of their business is now in question 27% say they will have to close their business this season or next
In
Summary:
“People
need salmon and salmon need people” (Tom Rutherford-retired DFO
Community Advisor). The creators of this briefing note strongly recommend our
government takes immediate and decisive action to implement a Southern BC
Chinook salmon recovery program, to include habitat protection and restoration,
innovative freshwater water management and allocation, research and strategic
stock enhancement. The program must include implementation of Marked Selective
Chinook fishing made possible through mass marking all hatchery reared Chinook
and strategically enhancing Chinook to benefit the public fishery and
endangered Southern Resident Killer Whales.
With the Federal Election approaching, your support for British
Columbia’s Public Fishery and assistance in these objectives being implemented
are critical.
And that's a wrap. Now, please, please send a note to your MP. You may find any federal email address here: https://www.ourcommons.ca/Parliamentarians/en/members.
***
Here is new info on using helicopters to move salmon, the same thing as I am calling for to save SRKWs, by netting returning chinook salmon and using helicopters and live wells to ship them to killer whales. We should be able to move 1000 chinook a day: https://globalnews.ca/news/5779565/big-bar-landslide-latest/beta/?utm_expid=.kz0UD5JkQOCo6yMqxGqECg.1&utm_referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ecosia.org%2F&utm_source=Watershed+Watch+Email+List&utm_campaign=25d15bea09-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2019_08_21_10_23&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_405944b1b5-25d15bea09-166907249&mc_cid=25d15bea09&mc_eid=5777c92bcd.
***
Here is new info on using helicopters to move salmon, the same thing as I am calling for to save SRKWs, by netting returning chinook salmon and using helicopters and live wells to ship them to killer whales. We should be able to move 1000 chinook a day: https://globalnews.ca/news/5779565/big-bar-landslide-latest/beta/?utm_expid=.kz0UD5JkQOCo6yMqxGqECg.1&utm_referrer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ecosia.org%2F&utm_source=Watershed+Watch+Email+List&utm_campaign=25d15bea09-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_2019_08_21_10_23&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_405944b1b5-25d15bea09-166907249&mc_cid=25d15bea09&mc_eid=5777c92bcd.
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