Thank you.
I did a quick look here. There's a report by the fisheries committee from 2004 that looked at the sockeye salmon run. To help you out, there were about 2.7 million fish taken; 35% was by commercial fishing, 17% by FSC fishing, and astonishingly only 1% by the recreational fishery.
Interestingly, when you do an economic analysis of fishing in B.C.—this is in 2011, and the report I just cited was from 2004—the 2011 numbers are that the total value of the harvested catch off the coast of B.C. is $2.2 billion, of which an astonishing $936 million was for recreational fishing, or 42%. If one can relate the 1% harvest to the 42% value of the entire fishery off the west coast, will your wild salmon policy have a fisheries allocation strategy? Will you ultimately provide the recreational fishery with not only the respect that it's due, given the value, but also the number of fish that they would need to fulfill their needs?