The unfortunate part of this fishery is that nobody seems to focus on maybe changing the perception to the market that consumes the target query, in this case keta roe. Without dragging race into the equation and completely derailing a thread on the C/V fishing conditions, that could be something we focus on when we send our product overseas. The cost of this fishery to the last remaining wild steelhead returns as well as the wasted biomass so desperately needed every fall in some very crucial spawning and rearing habitat.
The original photos were of wasted chum during a economic sockeye beach seine opening, and now there are communal openings for chum beach seines.
Might I ask why would there be openings allowed weeks later for a species that was disregarded to the point they couldn't even be released back into the water. The closure window

? Window dressing fishery management at it's finest.