I think its a matter of industry dollars trump the fish and the anglers. Look at what happened to the rivers on Vancouver Island and the Thompson river Steelhead to see how logging and development and fish populations co- exist. And that happened with out any petroleum interest or development,well except for the Coq run, its got a pipeline and a highway which pretty much did its run in. Industry will stall and deny and keep right on rolling along and government will play along as need the jobs and the taxes and one day they will all be looking surprised and alarmed that all the fish are just gone. Fish need clean water and well forested drainage's to survive and neither seems to fit well with the economic model currently in place. We can,t continue with resource extraction and growth at present rate and expect wilderness to survive. The ecosystem is a lot more complex than leaving a strip of trees on either side of a stream for 50 meters or so and saying its still intact and ok. I think most can understand this but he who pays the piper calls the tune and that should be pretty obvious too. The wild back country while it looks vast is really a finite amount and once its all tramped over and cut down well it makes a difference. Again look at Vancouver Island steelhead fishing say in the 50-60,s and today, look at the developement and logging and its pretty obvious that the fish lost there. Good luck with your eastern slopes fishery and hope it is more successful in surviving than has happened in BC, we are just rolling along out here, salmon are way down now too and still we look for a reason other than what we are doing to our land out here, maybe its the ocean? Couldn,t be anything we have done to cause it.Sincerely best of luck, we failed big time in BC.Closing rivers on Island has done nothing to bring back the fish ,common sense would lead you to believe since it didn,t work then maybe that wasn,t the problem.