Airlines generally issue a SIC type today, if not the PIC type. Some erroneously call the PIC type a "captain type."
Regardless of whether any rating is issued, point is that airlines don't simply do three bounces and call it good. Training generally covers the same material, and is often done to the same standard. One really shouldn't be there anyway unless one can perform to the ATP standard.
One cannot take the paperwork from one's proficiency or sim check and simply obtain an ATP, even documenting the actions taken or performed in the simulator or in an oral. However, the practical test is adequate preparation for one who intends to go elsewhere to obtain the rating.
I've taken many checkrides, including early in my career, during which the ATP could easily have been done. However, when I had adequate experience, I obtained the ATP on my own. One who is interested in furthering his qualifications and making himself more marketable might certainly take it upon himself to lift a finger to further his qualifications, rather than waiting for another to give it to him.
Wow Avbug, I never knew that getting my ATP at 3600 hrs put me behind the "curve".
Well, now you know.
I flight instructed until I had 2100 hrs and worked at ACA til 3600 hr- so where was the need for the ATP?? After my furlough, I was hired by a company flying a BE30 AND they paid for my ATP/type-rating.
You were fortunate. A pilot today who is attempting to make himself marketable in a market which is flooded with overqualified applicants, the majority of whom hold an ATP and a degree, is far behind the curve. A little like the parable of Christ's five virgins who failed to buy oil for their lamp...waiting for the wedding party to come by isn't the time to start looking for that lamp oil, and waiting for the job market to collapse isn't the time to start attempting to get qualified.
The "I don't need it so I won't get it" mentality is lazy at best, and apathetic and slow. It's the mentality of procrastination. Nothing stopped you from obtaining your ATP while you worked for ATA...you simply elected not to do so.
I worked for years gaining experience as a mechanic, as well as flying. With adequate experience, I tested for, and obtained, my mechanic certificate (A&P). Nobody paid me to do it, and I didn't "need it." In the years since, however, it's been put to use many times, has brought jobs to my door, has made jobs pay more because of the extra qualifications, and has given me work when the flying was scarce. It's one such example. The ATP is another...but the ATP for a pilot, even though you may not have a flying position requiring the ATP to be legal...is as much a "should have" and a "must have" as anything.
If you have the hours and the experience to qualify, there's really no excuse for not obtaining it.
When I obtained mine, I certainly didn't "need" it. I was flying single engine airplanes in the back country in decidedly very-VFR operations. Never the less, posession of the ATP opened other doors, and has continued to do so until today, when my work does require it.
The attitude of doing and obtaining the bare minimum until someone hands it to you is a poor one, indeed.