when the commercial fishery happens the 1st Nations take (both the food/ceremonial part of the economic opportunity part) is usually about 20% of the total. After about a century of injustice that amounted to racist theft, 1st Nations in BC won back their right to fish and 1st priority access to the resource. That's not going to change for a very long time, if ever. I also would not want to see or expect netting in river or at the mouth to be brought to an end. The alternatives simply are not all that workable. The commercial fishing industry is how the general public gets access to the resource, so it is necessary. Better management and techniques can substantially reduce the unintended impacts of net fishing.
Why do you not want to see netting in the river stopped? When the sockeye run this year was downgraded, it was amazing how all of the openings now are dip net or fish wheel on the Fraser. If you are going to try and say that wasn't to try and limit stress on sockeye or reduce by catch then I would be interested in your explanation. If it is for one of those two reasons, then perhaps those nets should only be allowed in the river during sockeye runs on years where there is plenty of returning fish, and not just switching to a larger mesh because obviously that wasn't enough this year.
In fact, if you have watched fish around nets, a sockeye can easily get caught in an 8 inch mesh. Unless they get extremely tangled, they are usually able to work their way out and continue on. There have been so much discussion on here lately about the effect of catch and release on these fish. You think this is any better?
If the runs are hurting, either everyone is on board and working to protect the runs or you are going to lose support. If one group doesn't contribute but instead gets everything they can get now, screw the future, then there will be plenty of other people who will just say burn the whole thing down, get what you can, get your memories now to remember for when there are no fish. That is what happened in Washington on a couple rivers. They ended up fishing things down to where whole runs were extremely endangered and made it so nobody could fish for them.