Mountain Valley Collegiate Conference
A BRIEF HISTORY
The Mountain Valley Collegiate
Conference was an outgrowth of the Northeastern Collegiate
Conference, whose membership included an array of differing two-
and four-year educational institutions.
On October 30,1970, representatives from six community colleges
convened for the purpose of organizing and drawing up a
constitution that would unite them into one athletic body with
shared compatible educational objectives, size, programs, and
geographic locations. Originally, there were championships in nine
sports, all determined by one-day tournaments, with the exception
of basketball.
During the 1976-77 year, plans were formalized for a separate
Women's Division within the MVCC. Currently, there are
championships for women members in soccer, volleyball, tennis,
cross country, bowling, basketball, swimming, softball and track.
Men's championships are determined in cross country, soccer,
swimming, basketball, wrestling, track, lacrosse, golf, tennis,
baseball, and bowling.
Competition among the various members is keen. Many member colleges
usually prove to be strong contenders in various Region III sports
as well, making the MVCC one of the most viable community college
athletic conferences within Region III of the NJCAA.
Since 1970, the membership has increased to ten. The Conference
charter members consisted of Adirondack Community College,
SUNY Cobleskill, Fulton-Montgomery Community College, Hudson Valley
Community College, Herkimer County Community College, and
Schenectady County Community College. Next to realize the
desirability of conference membership was SUNY Morrisville,
followed by SUNY Delhi and Mohawk Valley Community College. Most
recently, Columbia-Greene joined the body as the tenth member.
In 2006, SUNY Morrisville left the Mountain Valley Conference and
joined the NCAA Division III ranks.
Beginning Fall 2008, SUNY Cobleskill departed the conference to
become an NCAA Division III Member, and Clinton Community College
and North Country Community College joined the conference, to keep
it a healthy and strong 10-member conference.









