Hey Bow,
Thanks for listening to our show, I sincerely appreciate it!
We work pretty hard on the content and I feel it showed today with Dr. Garrett's appearance.
Here's the thing though: It's in this year of low returns that our fisheries struggles come to a head and the Sportsmen and Tribal relationships hit a low point.
There's a heck of a lot of harvest of our Washington-bound salmonids in Alaskan and Canadian waters before they even get within reach of us, so in a very real sense, there is harvest in front of the tribal terminal area fisheries.
In my opinion, the best way to gain opportunity is to produce our way out of this with hatcheries and habitat enhancement. The easiest path to that goal in in cooperation with the tribes.
After this springs acrimonious North of Falcon debacle it's difficult to resist the temptation to paint all the tribes with the same brush. With the Skok's refusal to allow bank access and the Puy's lack of good faith bargaining it's easy to get ticked off. However, there are several tribes -The Tulalips for example, that provide opportunity for sportsmen and do not completely agree with the hard line of the aforementioned peoples.
The bottom line is that the Boldt Decision is the law of the land and will never be overturned so lets move on.
This spring, our Government's de facto interpretation of the Federal Endangered Species Act was to allow tribal gillnetting and not allow any sportfishing whatsoever without the State of Washington obtaining their own lethal take permit of this endangered species namely Puget Sound chinook salmon.
In essence, the tribes have a legal right to fish through their treaties with the US Government.
The citizens of Washington have a privilege to fish within the seasons and catch limits set by WDFW.
The Feds will always side with the tribes and if we want to get out of this mess, we need to re-examine our approach to cooperation with the tribal co-managers.