Hey Oly,
You're asking a mouthful there... But, I'll do my best
Like you correctly point out, the lower 48 has predominantly odd year pinks while several central British Columbia and southeast Alaskan streams play host to pink runs every year. Farther to the north, roughly beginning in Prince Williams Sound the dominant year class of pink salmon occurs in even years.
To the best of my knowledge, there has never been a satisfactory, well-accepted scientific explanation for this pattern of pink salmon abundance. However, a chinook abundance pattern related to pinks has been identified that would make any even-year pink enhancement project ill-advised.
The University of Washington's Dr. Greg Ruggerone has studied pink/chinook interactions and has determined that juvenile chinook survival is affected negatively by pink salmon populations.
Here's a link to the paper:
http://home.comcast.net/~ruggerone/ChinookSurvival.pdfSorry to throw cold water on your pro-pink population position but in this day of WDFW budgetary constraints, in my opinion, getting the funding for a project of the scope you're suggesting just is not in the cards.