The treaty tribes say catch and release fishing is playing with our food. They might be right at the end of the day, but that WDFW calls steelhead "sport" fish while the tribes consider them food and kill every one they can catch points out a key fallacy of the "co-management" paradigm.It’s a classic case of the state of WA being hyper aware of the little things and missing the point entirely. Our state over thinks everything and delivers unsatisfying and expensive results every time. They don’t focus on the result, they focus on hypothetical liability and shit that we as the users don’t care about. We just want to go fishing, but that isn’t what this is about.
Crazy as it sounds, I think steelhead sport fisheries would be a higher priority for WDFW if they considered them food. Like @Salmo_g laments, WDFW (the "Department of Salmon") manages all salmon (food) fisheries for maximum harvest, and they fund (paltry) enforcement for salmon fisheries without question. "Sport" fisheries are an afterthought at best, and they're the first to hit the chopping block when funding is scarce. Leaves both sport anglers and our state fish off the table (so to speak).
A fishery where at least a vast majority of anglers are conscientiously trying to avoid killing the target species simply doesn't merit the enforcement harvest fisheries do. Poachers only poach more when they know there is no enforcement around. Any honest analysis points to WDFW closing this fishery to hit us where it hurts and "punish" us for not providing their bloated, misguided agency with enough revenue. And oh yeah... we'll all be paying more for our licenses next year just the same.
What's the Skagit word for bullshit? I bet it's fun to say, and I think it applies here.