Sad to hear.
As far as hatchery fish they did get as many as last year back already. That isn't much, but shows they are a year behind closing it early as this is clearly a reaction to a bad year last year.
The combination of massive hatchery plants and turning the few wild fish left into plants under the name "broodstock" has done this system in. Hatchery interaction is high on this river. Everytime I have witnessed a salmon or steelhead spawning it has always been a hatchery fish and a wild fish. They need to get ALL of the hatchery planted fish out of the mainstem and moved to Soos creek if they are going to continue to plant them.