S.G. gave us a key reason, I think, that the status of our fish stocks are so poor-
WDFW is required by legislative mandate to preserve and perpetuate fish and wildlife resources and also maintain viable commercial fisheries as well as recreational fisheries.
So far, it seems to me that our state has emphasized maintaining the fisheries, without realizing that we have to maintain and protect the resources FIRST! Otherwise, we're not going to have any fisheries, sport or commercial. All too often, it seems WDFW errors on the side of harvest, rather than conservation. Maybe we need a legislative mandate to set/re-set the priorities?
When I went to the SSMP meeting, in Wenatchee, I was quite disappointed to hear Jim Buck pretty much dismiss the idea of the department using it's regulatory power, (or seeking more), to deal with habitat/hydro issues. Just more of the same, I guess. Of course, the department's kind of in a Faustian deal with the PUDs over here, and their (the PUDs') mitigation money. At this point, I suspect any agency bios that made too much noise, about the overwhelming takings of ESA listed fish by hydro projects, would get a severe reprimand, if not the boot.
I was also disappointed to see that the department's idea of Outreach was just to simply partner with groups on projects. My wife has been doing community outreach for years, and I learned long ago that the first step in outreach is public education about a problem- that way you gain more partners with which to work towards solutions. My own sense, from dealing with the general public, is that most people have no real sense of how bad off our stocks are, and what the biggest problems are facing those stocks.
Dolphin- I've been concerned about our reliance on hatchery fish and not just because of the potential for genetics issues. There are also displacement issues, such as hatchery spawners competing for space with wild spawners and hatchery smolts competing for food with wild smolts. There's also the harvest pressures that come with abundant hatchery runs. Unfortunately, not all fishing methods are as selective as hook and line fisheries.
I think it's all a damn shame, as salmonids are our own regions "Golden Goose" (Geese?), and we're killing them off.