So this hasn't come up on WaLakes yet, but it need to get out there. I just found out about it from one of my guide friends. I'm sure there are a lot of opinions out there about this and some see it as a great thing, especially if they are sporties tht have no intention of being a guide. The idea is that there would be a limited amount of stamps for each river system, and you have to have the stamp to guide on that river, thus limiting the amount of guides fishing any given stream. I'm pretty sure it's because the guides association out in Forks gets tired of Seattle guides coming out for the late steelheading and wants to monopolize it all for themselves.Requires the department of fish and wildlife to issue a western Washington steelhead guide stamp.
Allows the holder of a food fish guide license to only offer or perform services related to the taking of steelhead
in certain nonmarine bodies of water if the license holder also purchases a western Washington steelhead guide stamp.
Includes in the crime of acting as a game fish guide, food fish guide, or chartering without a license if a person offers
or performs guide services related to the taking of steelhead in certain nonmarine bodies of water without first obtaining a western Washington steelhead guide stamp.
I'm strongly opposed to this, and so should you. This is a money grab by the state, and a power grab by the guides out there. Guides should be against it because it's going to tremendously affect our bottom line. But let me tell you why you need to be against it.
It means that if and when you want to book a trip on a river, say the Bogey, or the Cowlitz, when the fishing is hot, odds are you're not going to be able to, unless you book months in advance. If 3 guides are working on the Bogey, the season runs for three months, I'd be booked up by October. That's three trips a day that are available to all of us that want to fish. It'd be the same for all the rivers. Not enough trips to go around. This means that they'd become a precious commodity. That means that the guides would raise their rates, and you couldn't do anything about it. And we'd have to. The Skykomish is only good for steel for a few months a year, and it closes in February. If I have a stamp for only a few rivers like they want, I'm not working all year. Which means I have to get my bottom line up in 7 or 8 months to the amount that I make in 12 now. That means I'm charging a heckuva lot more money per trip. And even if you did want to pay that much, us guides may not even be able to get you your trip because we'll be booked up 7 days a week when the fishing is going to be good.
The bill is in committee right now, but if we don't speak up it'll have a good chance of passing. I'm going to dig up the contact info of the folks on the committee and get it so that you can send them a letter voicing your concern.