Have you guys noticed the walleye population decline in the kawarthas? This is a good read,
https://savethewalleye.ca/ and here’s the reason
https://jamieschmale.ca/walleye/LarrysReport.pdfI have emailed the Trent Severn waterway system, as well as the other parties involved. I encourage EVERYONE to send out emails and put pressure on them to fix this problem.
So far I have gotten this reply back.
Dear Brandon,
Thank you for taking the time to write to my office. Sincerest of apologies for the delay in responding to your message.
Effective communication between constituents and their elected officials is crucial for a thriving democracy, and your engagement helps ensure that your voice is heard, and your needs are considered.
I have been trying for two terms to get the Ministry of Natural Resources & Forestry (MNRF) and the Trent-Severn Waterway (TSW) to acknowledge that the walleye fishery and lake levels need improvement.
The two are closely tied.
At the federal level, I continue to pressure the TSW to direct spring water over the spawning beds on the north side of the Bobcaygeon River in March/April. Current operations use only two hydraulic gates on the far side of the river that divert water away from the historic spawning area.
It would seem manual logs aren’t as easy to operate as push-button gates! The TSW requires an expensive study spanning several years before they consider my request on behalf of the Save the Walleye committee. This red tape answer is compounded by an unwillingness to fund this study.
Kawartha Conservation has offered to take on these studies and try to secure funding.
Provincially, the MNRF shrugs its shoulders and says, “things aren’t that bad.” Not bad compared to what? The fishery has experienced a steady downhill trend for decades, something the MNRF is quick to pin on fishing pressure. But fishing pressure is lower than it’s been in decades, given how difficult it is now to catch one due to annual reproduction failure. And if the MNRF holds fast to pressure, why run an unenforced winter fishery? It’s a money grab that facilitates poaching. The MNRF’s final crutch statement is that they don’t control the water, pushing blame up the ladder.
Getting different levels of government, and their respective agencies, to cooperate has been difficult.
Save the Walleye proposed using Bobcaygeon and Lindsay as two pilot project areas for what I hope will be a system-wide change.
I will support this campaign and I’ll do what I can to pressure the Federal Minister of Environment and Climate Change for Canada (MOE) and the provincial Minister of Natural Resources and Forestry to do the right thing.
The biggest problems: lack of winter water, ecologically harmful water levels and flows, and worn-out spawning areas. If we fix these things, we will better support the spawn, realize higher hatch rates, and see an increase in walleye recruitment over the next 5 years and beyond. It is my hope that future generations will know the fishery and our waterway as it once was—healthy and thriving.
I encourage you to call local agencies and add your voice. Thank you for your support!
Please accept my best wishes.
Again, thank you for writing.
Sincerely,
Jamie Schmale
Member of Parliament
Haliburton-Kawartha Lakes-Brock