Speedwings,
At Comair, i think we had 30 days to enroll in the health insurance, wasn't a priority for me so i waited till the deadline. the insurance is pretty good, we ended up dropping my wife's coverage (schoolteacher in ATL), Comair offered the same level of coverage, but cheaper than she got through the school district.
Take the earliest possible date they can give you. Drop everything, call in with explosive diarrhea if you have to. are you in a situation where you can't tell your boss? mine wasn't happy about it, but he appreciated the honesty...
>Does my type rating really mean much to a regional? Even if it's in a jet far from a CRJ/ERJ?
sure it does. it says you know how to fly a jet that i guarantee is harder to fly than the RJ, and you'll have no trouble in training.
although times were different, i interviewed in Aug 02, started class in Nov 02. out of 14 in my class, i was tied for lowest time in my class with 1500 hours. the other guy was a Comair academy grad. of those, 1100 were in jets (long story - but yes, i was a lucky ba$tard) with only about 200 PIC in a Lear 25 doing Part 91 flying. my jet time and my type were what got me my job.
Comair does indeed have a commuter policy. others do too, but surprisingly ASA does not. be at the gate for two flights that get in at least 30 minutes before your report time. if you don't get on, call scheduling and just get up there as soon as practical.
as for where to go, get as much info as you can from us. QOL, pay rates, min guarantee, min days off, time on reserve, guesstimate to upgrade, what kind of equipment, what kind of attitude during training, benefits, relationship with management, do the chief pilots fight for you or the company, etc.
growth at Comair may indeed be slowing, but we're hiring 250 FO's next year. That's rock solid, based on the 8 CRJ 700 deliveries. If we get the 32 DoJets or any of the phantom 45 RJs, well, you get the point.
if upgrade/senority are paramount, probably CHQ is the one to look at. our guys like to bash them (lingering sour grapes over losing MCO i imagine), but at least they signed a contract that was better than the one before it. Not many airlines do that anymore. Mesaba's a good group of people, but the possibility of losing the Avro and 40% of its staff is a bit chilling...
but, as always, try to get hired by everyone and pick the one that feels right for you.