What is McKenzie Community Communications (MCC)
MCC is a nonprofit community-based organization serving residents along the McKenzie River Valley in Oregon. mckenziecommunications.org
Its mission is to https://mckenziecommunications.org/about/?utm_source=chatgpt.comprovide a resilient, community-controlled communications infrastructure — especially important in emergencies when conventional services (cell phone, landline, broadband) may fail.
What MCC Provides
Emergency radio services and a radio-network backbone (using repeated relays) to support communication even during outages or disasters.
Broadband Internet service, free public-WiFi hotspots, and other Internet connectivity solutions for valley residents, including those with little or no prior service.
A General Mobile Radio Service (GMRS) repeater network with distributed radios — so residents have access to reliable, low-cost radio communication across the valley especially during emergencies.
Why It Matters / Its Goals
Because the McKenzie River Valley is rural and vulnerable to events such as wildfires (e.g. the 2020 wildfire season), loss of power or coverage can isolate people — MCC’s infrastructure aims to ensure reliable communication when standard networks fail.
In addition to emergency resilience, MCC helps improve overall connectivity and access, making internet and communications more broadly available and affordable for residents.
MCC plans to support future infrastructure expansion and share its model to help other rural communities build their own resilient wireless networks.
Recent / Historical Context
After the major fires in 2020 (e.g. the Holiday Farm Fire), MCC gained attention and funding: for example, it received a grant of US$105,000 from a fund administered by the Oregon Community Foundation (OCF), in collaboration with other foundations, to build a robust GMRS repeater network for future emergencies.
Because traditional phone and cell networks proved vulnerable during disasters, MCC’s proponents argue that distributed GMRS radios + repeaters + community-owned internet backhaul provide a more dependable way for neighbors to stay connected, coordinate, and access emergency resources.
