Make the McKenzie Connection!

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  • Letters to the Editor

    Dec 7, 2023

    Come celebrate with us this Saturday, December 9th starting around 4:30 pm as we gather at the Upper McKenzie Community Center for the Annual Bridge Lighting Celebration. Watch for Santa and his helpers as they make their way down the river in festively lit river rafts in the Annual River Raft Parade, sponsored by Horse Creek Lodge. Sing your favorite Christmas songs as we walk to light the bridge to ring in the season. Hot Cocoa and cider will warm you up when we return. There will be crafts for the kids and great historical information, too....

  • Letter to the Editor

    Nov 30, 2023

    The Bottle Boys “Dime at a Time” program has gifted McKenzie Fire & Rescue with a $500 donation for the Life Jacket Lending Program. McKenzie Fire & Rescue began the Life Jacket Lending Program in 2000 following a tragic incident and have since partnered with the McKenzie River Guides to ensure life jackets are available at no charge for daily use on the McKenzie River. Life jackets are distributed in the Spring to businesses in the McKenzie Valley, where they remain during the summer months. People enjoying the recreational value of the McK...

  • Guest Opinion

    Tim Nesbitt, Oregon Captal Chronicle|Nov 30, 2023

    The Portland teacher's strike sent a message to state lawmakers who hold the purse strings for Portland and the state’s other 196 school districts: You can’t keep writing checks for our schools without getting more involved in how those checks are spent. Portland teachers managed to force changes in the district’s budget, boosting their salaries and highlighting the issue of unmanageable class sizes. But they had no way to deal with the state’s K-12 budget, which became the immovable object at the bargaining table and set the non-neg...

  • Guest Opinion

    Eric Mortenson|Oct 26, 2023

    (And as far as we knew, things were going to stay that way.) We were free and white, as people in our town used to say, and about five years out from being 21, which would seal the deal. As far as we knew, there wasn’t much to worry about, except the damn Russians and sometimes the Chinese. And things stayed that way for guys like us, for decades. But things did start to change, over time, didn’t they? I’m glad to see America turn, however slow and painful it’s been before our time is completely...

  • Letter to the Editor

    Oct 19, 2023

    I had to pinch myself when I stumbled across the opinion piece in the McKenzie River Reflections written by Rusty Bentz. I know Rusty and to hear him advocate for the four lower Snake River dams blew my mind. He and his brother made their living to a large extent on having access to a free-flowing river to run their boats through the rapids and take rubes fishing for steelhead. (The salmon had long since been destroyed by the dams). Rusty delved into several ideas as to how one could manage to get a few of the Frankin fish back upstream so...

  • Committed to delivering the best

    Lane Tomkins|Oct 12, 2023

    Hello to all, especially those of you who may not know me. I’m Lane Tompkins, Superintendent/Principal of McKenzie School District and McKenzie River Community School. A native of McKenzie Bridge, I’m a proud alumnus of McKenzie Schools. Our district has seen transformative changes under my tenure. Notably: - We evolved our school into a community-centric charter, emphasizing place-based, project-based, and service learning. - We’ve inaugurated the first licensed child care center in the McKenzie corridor, a testament to our commitment to ea...

  • Guest Opinion

    Rusty Bentz, Columbia Basin Bulletin|Oct 5, 2023

    Oregon will receive $157 million from the federal government to help connect about 17,000 homes and businesses to the internet, the White House announced Wednesday. The money, which comes from the $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package passed by Congress in 2021, follows an earlier allocation of $688 million for broadband in Oregon through the $1.2 trillion infrastructure law, also passed in 2021. “Between those two programs, I would expect that we’re going to get all Oregonians that are currently unserved access to service,” Oregon broad...

  • Letters to the Editor

    Sep 28, 2023

    Americans have more media options than ever. We are inundated with stories, memes, videos, and promotions 24 hours a day. Most of us are on social media, which is built to provide an endless feed of content to keep us glued to our screens. Unfortunately, misinformation is prevalent, and much of that content isn’t fact-checked, verified, or professionally produced. The result is that we’re not always shown what we need to know, or the information that is most likely to impact our lives. That’s where local newspapers come in. Your local newsp...

  • Guest Opinion

    Ken Rawles|Sep 28, 2023

    Disclaimer: The views and opinions expressed in this op-ed are those of the author and do not reflect the official policy or position of the McKenzie Valley School District. The recent McKenzie School District board meeting illuminated a pressing issue: the critical need for qualified school bus drivers. Amidst the voices of concerned parents and experienced drivers, the board’s response highlighted a glaring gap in their approach. It’s essential to recognize that school board meetings are the proper place to address urgent matters like this on...

  • Ridin' the Rapids

    Ken Engelman|Sep 14, 2023

    Growing up it was a festive month with plenty of cake to go around because we celebrated my Mom’s birthday, and five days later, mine. That was many years ago and now far away as I moved around the country before settling in Oregon. Three years ago COVID and the Holiday Farm Fire impacted all of us. It was devastating to Louise, my wife, who was already being battered by the negative impacts of Alzheimer’s. Her passing made me less likely to look forward to future arrivals of the ninth month of the year. That foreboding proved to be acc...

  • Letter to the Editor

    Sep 7, 2023

    Today I heard the news that a vital part of our community is gone. Sue O’Brien passed away last week of heart failure. When her own heart was failing she continued to serve and lift others. For many years Sue was Sister John’s right hand. She helped Sister John feed this community. When Sister John was weak…Sue came along beside her and continued the mission and vision that Sister John had for those in need. She helped move the food being distributed out of the trunk of Sister John’s car to an actual Food Pantry that serves 43 families at this...

  • Guest Opinion

    Eric Mortenson|Sep 7, 2023

    Life isn’t seamless, but some people swing that way. I’ve been working on a Substack piece that was getting kind of ponderous and it occurred to me just this morning that I really should be writing about golf lessons instead. The annual tournament, put on by the United States Golf Association and played over four days, is open to women over 50. Many of the competitors were international stars when they were younger. I’ll go ahead and tell you now that Trish, our favorite, won the U.S. Senior Wom...

  • Letter to the Editor

    Aug 31, 2023

    We would like to send a special thanks to the Patio RV Park. They are allowing fire staff to use camping sites, showers and laundry. We can be a difficult group with loud trucks and dirty showers. We really appreciate the Patio Park. Lookout Fire Group...

  • Mismanagement of lands causing grief in wildfire season

    Melinda Montgomery|Aug 31, 2023

    As I sit here writing this, the hazy air brings up anxiety reminiscent of September 2020. It also brings up frustrations over the continued mismanagement of our federally managed state lands. I’m Melinda Montgomery. My roots in Lane County go back to the 1850s when my great-great-grandfather Parvin settled in Dexter. The Montgomery side arrived in Noti about 100 years ago and I am one of three generations living on the family timberlands today. We actively manage our property by maintaining l...

  • Letter to the Editor

    Aug 24, 2023

    After much thought and consideration, the board members of the Vida McKenzie Community Center have decided to cancel the McKenzie River Poker Fundraising event scheduled for Saturday, August 19th. We believe our community will be best served without the added stress of this event during this time due to the two wildfires in our immediate area. We appreciate everyone’s support of this event, including those of you that had planned a fun day on the river while helping with the rebuilding process of our community center. Those who donated p...

  • Guest Opinion

    Francesca Anton|Aug 24, 2023

    As I inhale the smoke and listen to the helicopters racing back and forth over the house, fighting yet another fire in the Central Cascades and McKenzie River Valley, my thoughts wander to the Permian Period of Earth’s history which ended in a mass extinction, and how this summer, with all it’s disturbing weather and environmental news, is reminding me of the conditions on Earth about 250 million years ago (mya) that brought the Permian to an end. In story form, Pangea, the most recent supercontinent, attained its condition of maximum tec...

  • Letter to the Editor

    Aug 17, 2023

    The 8-13-23 “Very Soft Opening” of Vida McKenzie Community Center was a wonderful success and the Board of VMCC wants to extend a “Thank You” to everyone who attended and who supported the event. For the first time since the Spring of 2020 (remember COVID) the Center was exactly what it is meant to be: a gathering place where friends, neighbors, and even out-of-town visitors meet. A special thanks to McKenzie Crest Wines who donated the sip tastings, to JoDee’s Cakes for donating the sweet bit...

  • Ridin' the Rapids

    Ken Engelman|Jul 27, 2023

    “The longest-running newspaper in southern California has ceased publication after filing for bankruptcy.” That email is part of a depressing trend as the United States continues to see newspapers die at the rate of two per week, according to another report on the state of local news. News “deserts” are growing. It’s estimated that some 70 million Americans live in a county with either no local news organization or only one. Locally, though, I hope you’ve been enjoying the work of Mc-Kenzie R...

  • Oh, Canada…damn You're just like us, without the routine mass murder and the widespread ignorance

    Eric Mortenson|Jul 27, 2023

    And look, you’ve got a Lake Agnes. In Alberta there, eh? Agnes was my mom’s name, so of course we had to go see. She’s a beauty, set apart and overlooked, maybe. And an uphill 3.5-kilometer hike to reach, a little over 2 miles. But with a sweet tea house at the end of the trail, welcoming you when you get there. We were in Alberta for about 10 days, including for Canada Day on July 1, and it was one of those trips that make you sigh if you know what I mean. We stayed in Calgary and Canmo...

  • Letter to the Editor

    Jul 20, 2023

    Two years ago, the Oregon Legislature passed House Bill 2021, which requires Oregon’s investor-owned electric utilities to phase out fossil fuels by 2040, producing all electricity from renewables—mostly wind and solar. But renewables have a problem: Wind and solar are notoriously unreliable. They must always depend on on-demand “dispatchable” resources, which in Oregon means natural gas and hydro. New hydro is nearly impossible to build, and with other dispatchables outlawed, Oregon could find itself without electricity when it’s really needed...

  • Guest Opinion

    Larry Burriss, Free Speech Center|Jul 20, 2023

    As we move closer and closer to the next election, and continue to debate the role of the media in American politics, we might want to stop for a moment and reflect on just how fragile our free-expression rights can be. In mid-July 1798, Congress passed the Sedition Act, which made it a crime to publish false, malicious, or scandalous writing about the government. Despite the First Amendment, which guaranteed a free press and free speech, despite all of the talk about freedom from tyranny, despite all of the newspapers springing up, with the...

  • Guest Opinion

    Michael Leach|Jun 29, 2023

    The Fourth of July holiday is an incredibly festive time nationwide. Across the state, families come together for gatherings and BBQs; there are parades, festivals, concerts, and fireworks. July Fourth is also America’s top beer-drinking holiday, with an estimated one billion dollars spent on beer during the holiday. Heavy drinking does have its pitfalls. These environments are challenging for anyone sober or in recovery from alcoholism or drug addiction. According to the National Center for Drug Abuse Statistics, 17% of adults over 18 binge d...

  • Here's how to bridge Oregon's urban-rural divide

    Eric Mortenson|Jun 29, 2023

    I was standing in line at OHSU — Oregon Health and Science University, Oregon’s premier medical facility — when I overheard the clerk ask a patient ahead of me, “Do you want your pronouns added to your chart this morning?” The country boy in me raised his eyebrows and stifled a smirk, because what could be more Woke, more Portland, more urban lib, than brandishing your preferred pronouns? (Mine are singular.) Right there, standing at ground level in OHSU’s Center for Health and Healing com...

  • Shop local: Protecting the free flow of public information

    Ken Paulson|Jun 15, 2023

    There's admirable support for independent local businesses these days. Many expected Amazon to put local bookstores out of business, but after a steady decline in the aughts, independent stores have had a resurgence, fueled in large part by a sense of community and the need to support businesses in our own backyards. We've seen the same thing with independent record stores. Though few saw the revival of vinyl coming, there has long been a concerted effort to support local record stores because o...

  • Letter to the Editor

    Jun 8, 2023

    The Oregon Senate has come to a standstill over the past several weeks. Most Republican Senators are boycotting floor sessions due to objections about both policy and process. Media accounts have portrayed the missing Senators in a negative light, but voters should ask why the majority party has driven Republicans to such extreme measures. Democrats hold all the power, so only they can broker a compromise. They’ve been unwilling to do that. One of the most basic rules of political leadership is to treat minority members with respect, because y...

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