Nice too see the Katzie band will find another food source other then sockeye.
Katzie to respect fish ban, says chief
Danna Johnson, The Times; With files from The Province
Published: Tuesday, August 21, 2007
Katzie First Nation Chief Diane Bailey is not interested in having the last of the Fraser River's sockeye.
While the Cheam First Nation conducted a protest fishery between Mission and Hope over the weekend, Bailey said the boats of her band members remained idle, and all members were instructed to respect the ban.
About 6.3 million sockeye were expected to return to the Fraser this year, and so far only 1.6 million have shown up. As a result of the devastating return, the federal Department of Fisheries and Oceans banned natives from fishing sockeye and Chinook in the lower Fraser, but permitted recreational sports fishermen on the water until midnight Sunday. Sports fishermen are also banned from reeling in sockeye, but according to Ernie Crey, a senior advisor to the Sto:lo Tribal council which represents several bands along the Fraser, those sports fishermen are illegally "catching and killing sockeye."
It really is bad news," he said. "Most of the aboriginal communities along the Fraser are small and impoverished and they really depend on sockeye to maintain themselves through the winter."
While Bailey admits salmon is a staple for many of her band members, they can make do without if it means preserving the sockeye run for future generations.
"A lot of people think we as natives live on fish. We don't," she told The TIMES.
"It is a high part of our diet, and commercial-wise, it has been the livelihood of this band," she said, but those times are long gone.
Several years back when the runs were strong, Bailey said there were more than double the number of fishing boats attached to the Katzie wharf, both in Pitt Meadows and on Barnston Island, has shrunk by half.
"I've got four sons, and thank God that's not all they depend on," Bailey said, though she added fishing is difficult to give up. Her father was a fisherman, she said: "It's something that's in you."
But no matter how much they may want to be out on the water, Bailey said she has told her members of the ban and they are respecting it.
"There is no fishing. I can't see going out there and killing off what little there is coming back."