Amen Tylsie,
As to hatchery fish production in Washington - the counting of hatchery production isn't so straightforward. Some hatcheries are desperately working to supplement wild stocks as best they can - they don't mark these as hatchery fish because they don't want them available for harvest. Some stocks like the South Fork of the Nooksack have been restored from the brink of extinction by using closed system hatchery production, where the fish are raised for a generation entirely in freshwater, just to increase the amount of fertilized eggs for the next generation. The South Fork fish are still struggling due to habitat loss and the fact that the South Fork is not glacier fed, so it is much more susceptible to dangerous temperature spikes in summers like the last couple we had.
As to seal-hiding habitat - historical records show that both the Nooksack and Skagit rivers in their unaltered states had huge log jams at their mouths - in the case of the Skagit it was more than 2 miles long. These were destroyed to make the rivers navigable, and the channels were dredged and consolidated from a fan down to a single channel. This lower river habitat gave the Skagit historically huge Chinook runs from the Spring to the Summer, with something like 7 separate stocks returning to various tributaries and sites in the mainstem to spawn. The state has just started to acknowledge the importance of this habitat has and begun a lower river restoration project on the Skagit.
Yes, in the short term, ocean conditions have sucked. They have sucked broadly and universally, so much so that Alaska systems with pristine systems have had disappointing returns as well. But at least for now, ocean conditions are still cyclical, and I believe things will get better for years to come and we will be surprised with the returns in some years to come.
As to Sockeye for this year, there is going to be a very strong demand for a commercial opening this year, as the first Alaska sockeye returns have been way below forecast and they have already had to cancel some openings. Let's hope the Pacific Salmon Commission doesn't get pressured into pretending the returns are there just to have them be disastrously over-harvested by all users.