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!   

Fundraising for Chinook Enhancement

Fundraising for Chinook Enhancement

SVIAC is actively fundraising to support next year’s Sooke Chinook Enhancement Initiative. Did you know that since 2017, more than 4,130,000 juvenile Chinook salmon have been successfully raised and released into the Sooke Basin. Over 500,000 have been coded-wire-tagged and adipose fin clipped to allow for identification and stock assessment purposes. So far, there has been no monetary support from government. Over $400,000 of private money has been raised to fund SCEI equipment purchases and pay operational expenses.

In 2023, we successfully raised another 630,000 Chinook that were released from our TME in April and May. The same or more are planned for 2024. Operating this initiative and releasing this many chinook requires funding to cover brood stock collection, hatchery rearing, special fish food, medication, electricity, fin clipping, inserting coded-wire-tags, transportation, TME equipment maintenance, net repairs, moorage fees and storage, plus the professional services of an aquaculturist. This coming year, the net pens need significant net repair or possible partial replacement. Total annual budget is approximately $70K every year.

So there you have it – this project needs your help! There are many different ways to support the project, including via donations to the upcoming online fundraiser, supporting derbies, becoming a member and with direct donations. We have some great businesses in and around Southern Vancouver Island who have long supported our efforts, and we welcome more! We also have some great examples of individual contributions. Read about one such contribution below!

* Longstanding individual donation pledge and challenge: Tom and Betty Cole have made an individual family donation to SVIAC to support the Sooke Chinook Enhancement Initiative since the project began! Their annual donation of $500 is an incredible contribution to the operating costs of the project. For 2024’s project, they have already pledged their donation and challenge the sportfishers out there to match their donation! SVIAC would be grateful if you’d consider doing just that!

 

 

Minister Murray … “Time’s Up!”

Minister Murray … “Time’s Up!”

THIS IS A CALL TO ACTION – FOR FAR TOO LONG SOUTHERN BC SALMON ANGLERS HAVE BEEN DENIED ACCESS TO ABUNDANT HATCHERY CHINOOK SALMON FROM APRIL UNTIL AUGUST.

Since former Fisheries Minister Wilkinson implemented a Chinook non-retention regulation in 2019 that spans from April 1 to August each year, BC’s salmon anglers have been deprived of catching and keeping any of the abundant hatchery Chinook in our waters.  Even though the SFAB and DFO have designed some of the cleanest Marked Selective Fisheries proposals anywhere, Minister Murray has still not approved them.  Anticipating some or all of these opportunities would start on April 1 this year, we are stunned to learn that as of today (April 17) the minister has still not made a decision and she only just received the proposals on her desk.

Well, it is now well past time that we, as concerned anglers, take our campaign to the next level. Be sure you share this to all you angling buddies and tackle shops you visit.  Come see  the Team from SVIAC and the PFA at the upcoming Victoria Outdoor Adventure Show April 21 – 23 at JDF Rec Centre. Keep checking back to see what further things you can do to help our cause.

Our friends at the Public Fishery Alliance and South Vancouver Island Anglers Coalition are working cooperatively to get these fisheries approved and opened up immediately.  Here below is the PFA “Call to Action” notice to anglers and the letter they wrote to the minister back on April 6.

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And this is the excellent PFA letter sent to Minister Murray weeks ago urgently requesting she approve these defensible fisheries …

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SVIAC SEEKS MINISTER’S URGENT ASSISTANCE …

SVIAC SEEKS MINISTER’S URGENT ASSISTANCE …

At the end of September, response letters from DFO (Fisheries Minister Jordan and Pacific RDG Rebecca Reid) have emerged that, in our opinion, are a clear indication of just how little our current federal government in Ottawa feel about the Public Salmon Fishery in British Columbia.  The Sport Fishing Advisory Board and SVIAC both received responses, as we are sure other groups from the West Coast angling community did too.

Firstly, it is astonishing to us that a SVIAC letter written in good faith and sent the Fisheries Minister on March 12, requesting urgent action by the federal government, would get a reply on September 28.  That is an insulting 200-day or 6 month delay in sending a response.  With the amount of support staff in the minister’s office and regardless of the Corona Virus, any Canadian individual writing to the federal government should receive a reply sooner on any matter, let alone one addressing an urgent matter from a stakeholder organization.

The full SVIAC March 12, 2020 letter and DFO Minister Jordan’s September 28, 2020 reply, 2020 are available at the following links:

SVIAC Letter to Minister Bernadette Jordan – Mar 12th, 2020

DFO Minister Bernadette Jordan’s reply  – Sept 28th, 2020

Regarding Marked Selective Fisheries (MSF) for salmon, the topic raised in the letters from the SFAB and SVIAC, our government is not giving us an outright no, but it certainly isn’t an enthusiastic yes let’s do it immediately either! The term “slow walking” seems more apt under the circumstance. (Dictionary: to slow walk is to perform a task slowly on purpose so as to drag out the time taken, usually in order to delay what the subject believes will occur next).  The opportunity to retain abundant USA-origin hatchery fin-clipped Chinook this past March and April, when there were NO stocks of concern present, was lost unnecessarily, depriving the public of viable fishing opportunities.  And the survival of the Public Chinook Fishery around South Vancouver Island is clearly in danger of collapse with the current policies being implemented by Ottawa.  Selective Marked Fishery is a viable solution and needs implementing immediately.  Even Premier John Horgan has made valiant efforts to inspire the Federal Liberal Government to take action by advocating for the recovery of wild salmon, supporting our public salmon fisheries and promoting salmon enhancement for the benefit of all British Columbians.  Yet some how, as government often does, Ottawa has managed to turn a positive opportunity into a drawn out bureaucratic exercise of pure frustration for the very Canadians they serve.

The Minister’s response letter is a classic example.  As usual, you can hear the sad violin music playing in your head as you read the explanations why (with tongue in cheek) –
–  we must conserve these stocks of concern in the ocean and be cautious about mixed stock Marked Selective Fisheries as they impact the weaker stocks (even though all wild fish must be released in the Public Fishery and, at the same time, DFO allow directed gill net fisheries for these very same stocks of concern on the Fraser River.  And let’s not forget that DFO can not seem to keep ahead of the rampant unlawful net fishing poachers who, by many accounts, kill thousands upon thousands of Chinook annually to be sold off for illegal profit).

We can’t compromise our antiquated stock assessment system for some new, cutting edge technology (there seems to be a cadre of DFOers who are clinging to their Coded Wire Tagging with an irrational zealous intolerance for change)

DFO haven’t got two brass farthings spare to pay for all the extra costs (HA! you have to laugh when DFO play the “no money” violin music as government happily shovels billions and billions of taxpayers money off the back of the truck to their pet woke causes de jour).

– Flooding the ocean with millions and millions of hatchery fish will starve the last few remaining wild salmon and interaction between hatchery and wild fish is too risky and just bad …

we must study MSF for at least another decade (even though DFO have released hundreds of millions of hatchery salmon for more than forty years, its now the time to study the inaction – phew, gimme a break!!)

The cynicism and sarcasm of the author around this article are clear.  We, the angling community of South Vancouver Island, have heard all this guff before, a thousand times.  In truth, it is time someone had the stones to stand up and say the truth out loud.  DFO have completely dropped the ball with Fraser Stream-Type Chinook stocks of concern. It is clear and historically proven that increasing fishing restrictions alone as a quasi recovery plan, which is essentially the departments sole strategy for the past 15 years with Fraser Chinook, is a loser’s game.  Yet, Minister after Minister sees it as a cheap solution to address a problem.  The analogy is giving the patient an aspirin for their headache as their leg drops off due to Gangrene.  If the patient was taken to hospital and given proper treatment right out of the gate, they wouldn’t need their leg amputated now!   Simply put, it kicks the can down the road.

The overwhelming majority of the angling community care deeply about our wild Pacific salmon resource and we wholly recognize it may take decades for Fraser River Chinook that are in real trouble to actually recover, if ever at all.  We understand the federal government is following a prime minister-ordered mandate to reconcile with the Indigenous people of Canada and that the health and protection of the environment is top of list too.   Yet, our important Public salmon fishery is in jeopardy of collapse and stands on the brink of the cliff.  Ottawa doesn’t have to wreak havoc and hardship on thousands of honest hard-working Canadians while hell-bent on achieving their other objectives.  We, the angling community, are all Canadians too and we just want fair treatment.

We don’t want to kill wild fish that are threatened or endangered, but please, please keep our fishery alive, all be it on life support while the Fraser Chinook recovery is implemented.  The Salmon Enhancement Program needs Minister Jordan to order all hatchery Coho and Chinook produced in Canada to be identifiably marked (adipose fin-clipped).  Let the Public salmon fishery keep the marked hatchery Chinook, which are raised for fisheries, when their abundance is high and any harm to struggling wild salmon in that area is infinitesimal.  And equally, let the Public fishery catch and keep Chinook in areas and at times where abundant stocks are present and wild stocks of concern are historically not present or very rare.  It’s just that simple!

 

 

FRASER CHINOOK AND SELECTIVE MARKED FISHING

FRASER CHINOOK AND SELECTIVE MARKED FISHING

In the past two years the Public Fishery has been fighting for its very survival, a struggle that is only worsened in 2020 by the COVID-19 pandemic. Certain Fraser River Chinook salmon, especially those stream-type fish that spend 18 months in the river rearing from alevins to smolts, continue to experience an unprecedented decline.  With Chinook salmon being the most important species to BC’s angling communities, there is real fear of what the future holds. So far, government experiments with Chinook non-retention measures have been a failure for the fishery.  Catch-and-release Chinook fishing just doesn’t cut it for the Public.

Go forward, the billion dollar question is: Can DFO rapidly implement meaningful measures that allow for the Fraser Chinook stocks of concern to recover, while simultaneously fostering the Public Salmon Fishery in Southern British Columbia?

SVIAC president, Christopher Bos, weighs in and lays out a solution for the Chinook and the survival of the Public Fishery in the briefing paper in the link HERE

2020 SFAB CHINOOK PROPOSAL

2020 SFAB CHINOOK PROPOSAL

DFO are currently sorting through and considering multiple fishing proposals from various stakeholders including this proposal from the SFAB. They will be consulting through the Integrated Harvest Planning Committee in the near future. It would be beneficial for the angling community to echo their support for the SFAB proposal by writing an email letter to the Minister of Fisheries Bernadette Jordan and the DFO Fraser River Salmon Team. Email addresses to send your letters to are: min@dfo-mpo.gc.ca; bernadette.jordan@parl.gc.ca; info@anglerscoalition.com; DFO.PacificSalmonRMT-EGRSaumonduPacifique.MPO@dfo-mpo.gc.ca;

Here is the link to the SFAB proposal in .pdf file format:

SFAB 2020-2021 IFMP FRASER RIVER CHINOOK NO IMPACT ANGLING PROPOSAL APRIL 9 2020

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