The backstory on why monitoring and enforcement are required--above and beyond other steelhead fisheries because Puget Sound Basin steelhead are still listed under the federal Endangered Species Act--as well as the dire state budget situation is detailed here:
https://wdfw.wa.gov/fishing/management/steelhead/puget-sound#skagit
None of this is new. WDFW, steelhead orgs, guides,
and fishing media have been telegraphing these challenges and the l
ooming shutdown of this fishery since last February when state reps and senators cut this line item from their 2025-2027 budget proposals.
Given the state legislature is currently proposing MORE cuts to fish and wildlife programs in the 2026-27 Supplemental Budget, as opposed to restoring funding cut in 2025, it may well be too late for funding to be restored in time for a 2027 Skagit/Sauk season.
The best bet at this point is securing funding for Puget Sound Salmon and Steelhead Monitoring (official description from WDFW's
budget webpage copied below)--which includes the Quicksilver Portfolio and Skagit/Sauk fishery--as either ongoing or dedicated (proviso) funding in the 2027-2029 state Operating Budget.
TU's action alerts are a great resource for contacting legislators on behalf of that funding.
Another option for 2025-2027 could be a dedicated "Puget Sound Steelhead Endorsement", similar to the
Columbia River Salmon and Steelhead Endorsement. It could be a $20 fee to fish for steelhead anywhere within the Puget Sound Basin DPS (which starts at the Elwha River and includes Hood Canal, Puget Sound, and eastern Straits). I'd happily pay it. I bet most steelheaders would.
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2025 Legislative Session: Budget Information
Salmon & Steelhead Monitoring, $1.6 million
Robust fisheries monitoring and planning efforts are critical to species conservation and recovery, co-management with Treaty Tribes, and fishing opportunities. This package includes support for Puget Sound freshwater fisheries monitoring efforts, including steelhead spawning estimates and angler surveys, and fishery planning efforts, including preparation of fishery management plans for steelhead fisheries. With ongoing support for monitoring, WDFW can safeguard the health of imperiled fishery stocks, meeting federal Endangered Species Act (ESA) and tribal co-management requirements while providing diverse and accessible recreational fishing opportunities for all Washingtonians.
The Conference budget
does not fund this request."