This is it as far as I know, though I'm not at all involved with the HR department, and we're non-union so nothing is set in stone.
Paid training at $22/hr with 75 hour guarantee. Hotel for only the first 2 nights of ground school in TUL then you're on your own (you're considered "in domicile"). Hotel paid for during sim training in DFW. After IOE pay is $25/hr.
Benefits available include Medical (Blue Cross), Dental, Health and Childcare Flex Plans, 401k (no match, yet), Life, AD&D. About $170/month for family med/dental.
As for schedules, who knows. Everything will change significantly with 3x as many airplanes on line. They've been quite livable with RSV pilots having 4 on 4 off type stuff, but again, expect that to change. Today I flew 5 legs, 7+33, TUL-BNA-OKC-ABQ-COS-TUL. Longest turn was 33 min, shortest 20. Duty time of 1125-2126. Had a couple of Arby's crew meals too! Some trips are just one TUL-BNA turn. No minimum day pay. I'm gettin' about 90 hours this month with a couple days' OT as a junior blockholder.
Upgrades? Who knows. The airline HAS to grow and they are looking at a new (additional, at first anyway) aircraft type for longer range ops, desiring them by year's end. That's promising I guess but right now there is no attrition.
In all honesty this is a risky play. The financing for the 4 new birds is still not completed (it's been expected any day for some time now), and without them the airline will probably shut down within a few months (IMO) without new investors. But, if it takes off, the business is planned for growth and it will be a good place to be.
I enjoy the job. Nice aircraft, nice people, home almost every night. We're making great progress in standardization, training, manuals, etc. in order to accomodate the growth safely. Plus it got me back home to TUL where we're serious about our high school football (the answer as to why ...... money! and lots of it).