Great info! How does it work for a non-flying job (say acft Mx officer)? Also, how does it work for this scenario: Person gets job at Travis AFB active duty, can that person go reserve and do same job at same base on reserve side? Furthermore, what if that person gets job at say Ameriflight and doesn't get the Oakland base and instead gets the Portland base. How does that work for his reserve job? Is it not feasible to go to that base for work since its so far away? Also, what if that person has to move to a different location after a year, how does that work with keeping the reserve gig at Travis? Does that person have to apply at the next nearest reserve base for a position (if close enough)?
Sorry about the thousand questions, I've just always wondered these things.
Yes that person can do the same job reserve side. Moving further way from the unit for the civilian job can work a few different ways.
1. You transfer to a reserve unit closer to your civilian job (if they have openings), but buyer beware changing units constantly does not bid well for ones later opportunities and career. Most people end up making longer commutes to stay at the same unit.
2. You stay at your current unit and commute. At my unit they pay for the commute if you're on orders, for everything else, getting there is on your dime, but they do billet and feed you.
3. It begins to become too large of a commitement and you quit, see below.
Whether things are feasible or not is up to you and your civilian employer. It all depends on how busy your unit is, how much they need you there and on the flip side how much your civilian employer can stand gone for the military. Ya I know they can't take any punitive action against you or fire you for military service, but in my experience the law and how companies treat you are two different animals entirely. Being a mx manager at a 135 would be pretty hectic I'd imagine. I wouldn't exactly plan on them following the law to the letter. Also don't forget between balancing the two jobs you have to see your wife and kids sometimes, as well as downtime for yourself. It's all a big balance.
As far as getting into to a unit already, they have to have a opening to apply to. For officers they usually make an announcement and enlisted people looking to promote as well as people that are already officers from other places apply and interview for the position.
Edit: Reserve and Guard work pretty much the same, don't skip over the same opportunities in the Guard!