I personally try not to violate the law. Salmon is a delicate resource, and way too many people clog up the Kenai to send fish to family outside. I'm NOT a fan of that.
I'm from Homer. One of the bains of our existance is Anchorage people coming down to the Kenai, dipping for more than they need, and shipping it outside, in violation of the intent of a Personal Use Fishery, and the law.
Why don't you stop dipping, since you don't need it for food throughout the year, and just hook and line fish for your family outside?
(for those other pipers wondering WTF is this about?... The Dipnetting fisheries in AK are intended for Alaskans to stock up the freezer for food. It is against AK law for AK residents to give dipnetted fish to non-residents. It's not to be a jerk, it's because the "method and means" of dipnetting is too easy to take too many fish. The quota is purely for food for residents, since there's not enough to go around.)
I am aware of a regulation stating that the fish may not be bartered or sold, not one saying you cannot give it away to family, but if such a law exists, sure, I'll just give them my rod and reel fish. For all I know that is what we are giving them anyway, it all comes out of the same freezer. And we are talking about a couple of pounds here not boxes and boxes like you see non resident sportfisherman leave with. On the rare occasions that I do dipnet (maybe 5 times in my life) I only take what myself and my family need (Last weekend 3 of us caught 20 fish (split 3 ways for 7 fish each) and stopped.
I am not from Anchorage, in fact I'm from an area far less populated than Homer, but I do find it funny how alot people who are from smaller towns seem to think they are more entitled to the aforementioned "delicate resource" than people from larger towns. Especially those that moved to smaller towns from out of state. Pretty silly if you ask me. We are all Alaska residents.
If I were you I'd be much more concerned with the impact commercial fishing has on this delicate resource, particularly in the Kenai area, so people all over the world can plate Alaskan sockeye, or maybe the thousands and thousands of people from the lower 48 that come up here snagging fish with spinning rods like nobodies business and hauling them home to god knows where, leaving the river full of beer cans, carcasses, cigarette butts, and hundreds of miles on monofilament. Your neighbors from north of the peninsula, lifelong Alaskans giving a few fillets to family members should be the least of your concerns.
I am a fly fisherman, especially fond of trout fishing, so there are very few people more aware of how delicate this resource is and how easily it can be spoiled. That is why as I mentioned above, we take only what we need. If we give some to family and run out of fish before the next season begins, it's no big deal.
While agree that many people harvest well beyond what they should, and distribute fish in a way that is not the intent of a personal use permit, I am not one of them. In fact, I have advocated on many occasions that resident sport fisherman should have to count the fish they harvest on a rod and reel toward their personal use limits, since the personal use limits are outrageously high.
Thankfully, as of right now, the Sockeye runs on the Kenai are doing extremely well and have outrageously high escapement (nearly double for the first run fish). That is the only reason I chose to dipnet this year at all.