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f_w said:There are occasional primary care 'GP' jobs with hospitals/clinics in alaska. All you need is an internship and a medical license. This might be what your friend was talking about. But these are not ACGME accredited training positions. If someone is hard up for money, it can be an option for a year or two between internship and a specialty residency.
DrDre' said:The Alaskan native fund would pay you after you became a state resident. It has decreased substantially since the glory days. It is only $1000-2000, I believe. Alaska is also very expensive to live in. People should only move to Alaska because they love the state. There are significant negatives for those that do it for ulterior motives.
5 hours of daylight in the winter, isolation from lower 48, ice storms in Anchorage in winter, high cost of everything.
I will likely relocate there myself. IT is not a decision to make lightly as the move alone is expensive.
TiggidyTooth said:I'm from alaska, and the most we recieved ever from the permanent dividend fund was $2000. Recently it hovers around $1500 but this is a far cry from $100,000 as the OP stated. Oh, you also have to be a resident for at least 2 years before you can start collecting it. Alaska is not expensive at all. Rents are extremely cheap. You can get a sweet 2 bedroom for $500-$600/month. McDonalds and luxury iteams are going to hiked up in price but life is no where near the cost of living as in Cali or New York. Alaska is truley one of the most beautiful places in the world, and winters are no worse than what you would experience in Chicago or Wisconsin. If you love skiing and lots of wilderness alaska is a dream come true. After 6 years of living in Anchorage I don't think I can recall one ice storm. Methinks that's an east coast or mid-west phenomenon but nothing I have ever witnessed. Living in Anchorage is really not as big of a deal as the above poster makes it sound. If you like semi-rural enviornments and are the adventurous type you will be absolutely tickled with this town. Oh, and the summers rock! With daylight all day long you can party like it's 1999, catch a few hours of sleep and be ready to rock for round 2.
Tooth
Heeed! said:Alaska is incredible...especially at 500 feet and 800 knots.
TiggidyTooth said:I'm from alaska, and the most we recieved ever from the permanent dividend fund was $2000. Recently it hovers around $1500 but this is a far cry from $100,000 as the OP stated. Oh, you also have to be a resident for at least 2 years before you can start collecting it. Alaska is not expensive at all. Rents are extremely cheap. You can get a sweet 2 bedroom for $500-$600/month. McDonalds and luxury iteams are going to hiked up in price but life is no where near the cost of living as in Cali or New York. Alaska is truley one of the most beautiful places in the world, and winters are no worse than what you would experience in Chicago or Wisconsin. If you love skiing and lots of wilderness alaska is a dream come true. After 6 years of living in Anchorage I don't think I can recall one ice storm. Methinks that's an east coast or mid-west phenomenon but nothing I have ever witnessed. Living in Anchorage is really not as big of a deal as the above poster makes it sound. If you like semi-rural enviornments and are the adventurous type you will be absolutely tickled with this town. Oh, and the summers rock! With daylight all day long you can party like it's 1999, catch a few hours of sleep and be ready to rock for round 2.
Tooth
There are occasional primary care 'GP' jobs with hospitals/clinics in alaska. All you need is an internship and a medical license. This might be what your friend was talking about. But these are not ACGME accredited training positions. If someone is hard up for money, it can be an option for a year or two between internship and a specialty residency.
I don't know if this is still true, but the state of Alaska pays each resident (I don't mean medical resident) a certain amount of money each year just for living in Alaska. This money comes from a fund of oil revenue that the state collects and distributes to its residents. I have no idea how much that is, but maybe it's enough to get up to $100K?
I'm from alaska, and the most we recieved ever from the permanent dividend fund was $2000. Recently it hovers around $1500 but this is a far cry from $100,000 as the OP stated. Oh, you also have to be a resident for at least 2 years before you can start collecting it. Alaska is not expensive at all. Rents are extremely cheap. You can get a sweet 2 bedroom for $500-$600/month. McDonalds and luxury iteams are going to hiked up in price but life is no where near the cost of living as in Cali or New York. Alaska is truley one of the most beautiful places in the world, and winters are no worse than what you would experience in Chicago or Wisconsin. If you love skiing and lots of wilderness alaska is a dream come true. After 6 years of living in Anchorage I don't think I can recall one ice storm. Methinks that's an east coast or mid-west phenomenon but nothing I have ever witnessed. Living in Anchorage is really not as big of a deal as the above poster makes it sound. If you like semi-rural enviornments and are the adventurous type you will be absolutely tickled with this town. Oh, and the summers rock! With daylight all day long you can party like it's 1999, catch a few hours of sleep and be ready to rock for round 2.
Tooth
hi would you be kind enough to tell me how to look for these?
There are occasional primary care 'GP' jobs with hospitals/clinics in alaska. All you need is an internship and a medical license. This might be what your friend was talking about. But these are not ACGME accredited training positions. If someone is hard up for money, it can be an option for a year or two between internship and a specialty residency.