I think you are missing the point of the debate. The point is, if the other rivers have pretty good runs of salmon due to hatchery stockings (Stamps, Vedder, even Chehalis), why shouldn't a local Vancouver river which used to have good stocking be stocked to its historic level? Costs? The other rivers stock much more and cost lots more. But they take tons of gas & time if you fish them regularly. Why not enhance this local river instead of those far out of Vancouver, especially this one is where tourists come to see the salmon, and if the 'fishing in the city' program needs a good stream (besides the lakes) to motivate people to fish close to the city, the Cap is the right one to do.
I always wonder why some in the fishing community will not want a good local fishery? Hate to see crowd? Like to get skunked? Protect the wild stocks? Well, the Cap is nothing but a hatchery river now and it should be stocked to produce a good coho fishery like its old days. Even in its hay days, it never had the crowd like the Vedder now. It has some fishermen at the top, and some at the bottom. But it has quite a long middle section for hiking fishermen to explore. Crowd should not be an issue. Besides, if the Cap is productive, it will take away the crowding in the Vedder & the Chehalis. People will still try the Valley rivers, but will be less frequent as now if they can enjoy fishing the Cap locally. My humble 2 cents.