I respect many of you have a deep desire to protect the fish stocks. It is a noble goal. The only way to do so is to shut down the entire river for any group, Period. If you are concerned about the spring stock, then stop bar fishing too, not just bbing. If the natives are netting springs, what is the point to talk about fish conservation. This is all politics and personal agenda on biased fishing ethics to me. Think about the NET EFFECT of your actions.
Let's just say you stop spring-loving bbers (yes, they love this delicacy just like you bar-fishers) from getting their springs now. The NET EFFECT is that they will postpone their spring catches until sockeye season (not a bad idea with the high cost of gas). Many may want to catch a spring after they are done with 2 socs, causing much more unnecessary soc hookup and taking a spot too long. Sockeye will suffer for this. Crowding with people not willing to leave after two socs can lead to confrontation between fishers. But people who like spring delicacy will target spring whether you let them do it now or later when sockeye is thick. Think seriously, which time of the year is best to let the bb springers catch their springs w/o harming other stocks? It is the early season from June to mid July, when socs are few in the river.
Also imagine you stop bbers from even sockeye fishing or very short opening. The NET EFFECT is, most people who like sockeye delicacy will buy socs from illegal source (and we know where it is). I have not heard of one case, of all the people I know who like sockeye delicacy, that they buy from a store. Every one likes the $10-$15 price than $40-60. The net effect of a closed recreational fishery on socs is to encourage much more illegal poaching from the 'tradition' group, and they don't fish with traditional method any more. A few more nights of poaching or a few more days of defiant fishing by this group can wipe out a run. I don't even count the economic loss and job loss to all those who depend on this fishery.
As noble as your intent is, to shut down bbing for springs & sockeye for the sake of the fish can back fire in reality. The NET effect can be quite disastrous for the fish, like it or not. However, if your fanatic and zealous lobbying to shut bbing down is concealed behind personal agenda about your narrow vision on fishing ethics, envy of bb catches, or fishing utopia (like the good old days with very few fishermen around), then the net effect can be really ugly, for both the fish and your so called moral victory.
So, what is the net effect of fishermen stuck at home at those times of the year when they should be fishing? I leave the answer to some of you geniuses out there.