Not necessarily true if you go to a school partnered with a regional. A number of the University programs will offer this and I have seen F/Os at places like Chicago Express with less than 300 total time. The key here is finding a school that has good relationships with a small carier. As for bot getting much time as an instructor, that isn't uncommon either anymore when many operators put their new instructor's only on instrument students effectively making them sim-jockey's for a while.User997 said:Regardless of what you hear, you DONT get an interview with an airline at 300 hours. That is the BARE MINIMUM hours that your going to get to go all the way thru the training.
Once you have finished all your training, you then must work as an instructor at the school until you get between 1000 (for Airnet) and between 1200-1500 hours to get an interview at a regional airline. Period, no exception. And I know of an instructor that works there that only logged 250 hours last year, so dont think it's going to be an overnight occurence either!