FISHERIES TOWN HALL MEETING

FISHERIES TOWN HALL MEETING

Anglers, it’s Essential Your Attend!

 

… Fisheries Town Hall Meeting

… Tuesday February 27, 2024 at 7:00 p.m.

… Four Points by Sheraton Victoria Gateway Hotel

… 829 McCallum Road, Victoria, BC  V9B 6W6

 

We are losing our opportunities to catch Chinook salmon in Southern British Columbia.  Salmon anglers are growing increasingly frustrated with the defective management of our salmon fisheries.  A problematic patchwork of Chinook salmon closures and frequently changing complex regulations that impede everyday Canadians from accessing abundant stocks, especially those of hatchery-origin.

It’s time to make this widely known!

Anglers are the real conservationists.  Combined, we give millions of dollars annually to conserving salmon and our gumboot army of volunteers provides hundreds of thousands of hours each year to habitat restoration, enhancement and stock monitoring.  We are also agreeable to doing our part in support of the recovery of Fraser River Chinook stocks of concern, but not at the death of our fishery, when viable scientifically-defensible opportunities exist.  And as for Southern Resident Killer Whales, we, like every Canadian should, hold these magnificent creatures in high esteem and want them to recover from their endangered status.  However, we find salmon anglers have unjustly lost the most closed to fishing area, only because expansive closures make great optics on a map for bureaucrats so desperate to show something is being done regarding the recovery plan to their Ottawa superiors.  It is our opinion that the Southern BC salmon fishery has become the scapegoat for an amateurish recovery strategy.

Town Hall Agenda (press this link)

We simply ask for fair access to abundant Chinook salmon stocks and for government to stop putting up road blocks to a rapid roll-out of marked selective Chinook fisheries.  It is time to stop using unproven science and kowtowing to anti-fishing ideologues. The Chinook salmon fishery in Southern BC is very important to Canadians who love to fish and the thousands of businesses that depend on the fishery for revenue.

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South Vancouver Island Anglers Coalition has organized this Town Hall Meeting, with our friends from the Public Fishery Alliance, the Fraser River Sportfishing Alliance and the Port Renfrew-based BC Recreational Fishing Association.  We want the public to hear about the injustice that is happening.  Politicians, both federal MPs as well as provincial MLAs, are being invited to join us and the local media are all being notified of the event.  We anticipate over 200 local anglers will attend in-person to show the level of discontent with the way our fishery is being managed.

 

 We look forward to seeing you there!

 

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2024 Halibut Allowable Catch Decided

2024 Halibut Allowable Catch Decided

Friday is here and we just found out what the IPHC Commissioners have decided regarding total halibut catch for 2024.  It looks like we, Canadian sports anglers, dodged a bullet.  North Pacific halibut stock is at a low and seemingly in worse shape in certain areas.  The Canadian delegation’s feeling seemed somewhat glum going into this year’s IPHC 100th AGM in anticipation of seeing a sizable drop in total allowable catch for Canada, which meant the sport fishery would be looking at reduced poundage available to plan our coming season.

In 2023 the recreational allowable catch was 880,250 lbs and we overfished before closing in September to the tune of 9,631 lbs, a quantity that will be taken off our 2024 catch before we start.  Canada’s portion of the total Pacific catch is 6,470,000 lbs and after calculation the recreational allowable catch will be 836,250 lbs less the 9,631 lbs of 2023 overage.   It appears we have 53,631 lbs less than 2023.  So it could have been much worse if the delegates lobbying for a 15% reduction had been adopted.  Now you SFAB Halibut Working Group will go to work and develop a coast-wide fishing plan at the end of this month.  

All-in-all yet another outstanding job done by our Canadian delegation and a big thank you to our commissioners for using their excellent negotiation skills dealing with the USA. 

Now we can dream of bringing home some fresh hali for the table after a great day on the water and hopefully in a few weeks, weather permitting, that will be an option!

Yeh, It’s Hali Time!

Yeh, It’s Hali Time!

Today, in Anchorage, the sky is clear and sun is shinning, implying it’s a lovely day, however the temperature is a very nippy -18 degrees Celsius.  Regardless of the weather, it is a remarkable day as the International Pacific Halibut Commission is holding its annual general meeting this week for the 100th time. The honourable distinction being, this is the longest running country-to-country fisheries management commission out there.  That is quite a feat!

We must also acknowledge modern day technology that allows people to participate meaningfully in meetings via virtual attendance online.  So here I am, your SVIAC IPHC rep in a warm room in Victoria, BC looking out my window at hummingbirds feeding, while weighing in virtually on all matters halibut. So we keep our voting status on the IPHC Conference Board and maintain our presence in the Canadian delegation.  Our coalition’s board of directors felt the heavy cost of travel to Anchorage as well as hotel and meal expense (Approx. $5,000) could be better invested in rearing Chinook or advocating to save our salmon fishery, especially when we keep participating seamlessly.

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Whether online or sitting in Anchorage, Alaska at the Captain Cook Hotel ballroom for this meeting, the interested parties and reps are all busy discussing, negotiating and pressuring a decision on what the annual catch limits will be in 2024.  Decisions are based on the IPHC science presentation about the halibut stock health and abundance, then recommendations for fisheries will be made taking conservation into account. The process has worked well for one hundred years.

For ardent halibut anglers there is much uncertainty around the 2024 season.  Due to good weather and good fishing Canadian anglers and busy angling tourism trade, our sector caught more than their allotted halibut by early September last year, forcing the season to close early.  Worse still the 9,600 lbs over excess catch will be subtracted from the 2024 recreational allowable catch. For that reason, the hope and prayers are there for our delegation to secure a reasonable 2024 allowable catch for Canada, so we don\\t have our fishery decimated.

While still too early in the week to tell where we will land between the two countries regarding 2024 total catch by all sectors, there will most likely be less total allowable catch for Canada and USA for conservation reasons.  Also, it appears clear that so far, the Commissioners can not reach a decision on a long-term agreement for catch between Canada and USA and seem unlikely an agreement can be reached this week.  At worst, an outcome that has happened a couple of times before, is deadlock (no agreement), where the Commissioners can not reach consensus.  In that case, the countries are, by the terms of reference, expected to use the prior years total allowable as a baseline.

So, by Friday morning, the sausage making will be over and the Commissioners will announce what has been decided (or not).

We all wait with bated breath!   

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