Times Colonist

Fishermen fight salmon closures

- CARLA WILSON

Vancouver Island’s sports fishing sector and chambers of commerce leaders are calling on the federal government to hold off on further fishing restrictio­ns and pay attention to their voices as efforts are rolled out to save endangered orcas.

“As British Columbians who are now concerned about the survival of our own businesses and communitie­s, we urge the federal government to slow down the implementa­tion of any additional management measures, take time to get the science right and engage coastal stakeholde­rs,” Karl Ablack, Port Renfrew Chamber of Commerce vice-president, said at a press conference in Esquimalt.

Sports fishing representa­tives said they suffered after closures went into effect this spring off Sooke, in what is part of a larger area deemed to be a critical habitat zone for the 74 remaining southern resident orcas.

Chinook salmon are not only the favourite food of those orcas, but are prized by fishermen.

Industry fears that additional fishing closures could be introduced now that the critical habitat zone has been extended by 5,025 square kilometres off southweste­rn Vancouver Island.

The zone now stretches just north of Ucluelet and out to sea by 60 kilometres to include Swiftsure and La Perouse banks, popular sports fishing areas. The zone runs from the Southern Gulf Islands and through Juan de Fuca Strait and is outlined in federal Fisheries and Ocean’s updated killer whale recovery strategy released Wednesday,

Val Litwin, B.C. Chamber of Commerce president, said marine-based tourism sustains coastal communitie­s, who are worried about their future. Tourism, sports fishing and the chambers have banded together to form a group called Thriving Orcas, Thriving Coastal Communitie­s.

The group’s recommenda­tions include calling for more research, setting up a multi-sector advisory group for the critical-habitat zones and establishi­ng special management zones.

Members “want desperatel­y to reverse the trend of declining southern resident killer whale population­s and they see themselves as partners in the solution,” Litwin said. Increasing the size of the critical habitat zone “sets the stage for additional management measures that could curtail important marinebase­d tourism activities around La Perouse and Swiftsure banks, areas on which several Island communitie­s depend,” Litwin said.

Recreation­al fishing brings in direct revenues of close to $1 billion annually in B.C. and provides 8,400 jobs, he said, predicting that about one-third of that could be lost on the Island if fishing closures are imposed.

Ablack said that Port Renfrew, once forestry based, is reinventin­g itself through recreation and tourism.

Ryan Chamberlan­d, Vancouver Island Lodge owner and Sooke Regional Tourism Associatio­n president, said the federal government did not listen to the sports fishing sector.

Their group understand­s that there needs to be better science, education, and avoidance protocols to allow orcas to feed and properly socialize, he said.

Scott Wallace, David Suzuki Foundation senior research scientist, said there is a distinctio­n between an area being identified as important to killer whales and the introducti­on of closures, which have not been announced.

“The critical habitat identifica­tion is firstly a biological recognitio­n of the most important area [to killer whales]. It is not a management measure in itself.

“It was only last year where there were some fishing closures put into place and only for a small part of the area [off Sooke].”

 ??  ?? A pod of orcas swims near Pender Island.
A pod of orcas swims near Pender Island.

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