Washington Hunter
Well-known member
Moosie, I'm surprised you didn't get in on this. Or did you? You're not the Boise attorney's friend, are you? 
Tuesday, March 20, 2007
People hear ‘free land,’ make a beeline for Alaska
RACHEL D’ORO; The Associated Press
Last updated: March 20th, 2007 01:30 AM (PDT)
ANCHORAGE – They dropped everything to fly or drive north and camp out in 25-degree-below-zero weather.
They dreamed of the homes they would build amid the spruce and cottonwoods of the town of Anderson, population 300.
And within hours Monday, they had spoken for all the land Anderson had offered free to anyone willing to put down roots in Alaska’s frozen interior.
Bright and early Monday, 44 parties were waiting in line for a shot at the 26 large lots offered to the first people who applied and submitted $500 refundable deposits.
Few locals were among them, but there were plenty of people from down south, including Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Florida and Wisconsin.
“People are jacked,” Mayor Mike Pearson said. “They’re jubilant. It’s like a minifestival.”
And those are just the ones who hustled to show up after news broke about the giveaway, which requires that winning applicants build a house of at least 1,000 square feet within two years.
Boise attorney Jeremie Dufault claimed one of the 1.3-acre lots for a summer home and talked a friend into getting an adjacent lot so they could vacation together.
“This is a brilliant and innovative way to create a neighborhood because now we all know each other and we’ve been through this together,” Dufault said about waiting in line.
No. 26 was Ross Shoger of Portland, who was on a 6 a.m. flight Saturday just hours after he heard about the offer. The 23-year-old flew to Fairbanks, then hitchhiked to Anderson, where he plans to do odd jobs to make a living in a town where most employment opportunities require some driving.
Those who failed to make the initial cut, including piles of applications expected this week in the mail, still have a chance because city officials gave the first 26 people in line a week to change their minds about making the commitment.
Despite the brutal winters of the interior, where temperatures can plunge to 60 below, callers zeroed in on two words: free land. Thousands of people called from all 50 states, Canada, Taiwan, India and South America.
“This is insane,” said Anderson High School teacher Daryl Frisbie, whose social studies class developed the homesteading idea to boost the town’s dwindling population. “It’s more than I ever imagined.”
Originally published: March 20th, 2007 01:00 AM (PDT)