http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/09/21/AR2006092100259.htmlANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Almost every Alaskan will be $1,106.96 richer this year, thanks to dividend checks from the state's oil royalty investment program distributed annually to eligible residents just for living here.
Gov. Frank Murkowski on Wednesday night announced the amount of the checks, which end a five-year slide in dividend amounts from the Alaska Permanent Fund, established in 1976 after North Slope oil was discovered. Dividends have been paid since 1982, ranging from $331.29 to a record high of $1,963.86 in 2000.
Steve Meads is among the 602,350 Alaska men, women and children waiting for the money to begin flowing in October. The 62-year-old Anchorage hotel doorman said his check is already spoken for.
"I'm going to spend it on a new set of teeth," he said. "I need a partial rebuild and I don't have dental insurance. Without this money, I'd be out of a job because I have to smile so much."