Oh by all that is holy, NO! Do not go there! Unless you like badly maintained planes, a horrible safety record, and the Feds ramping you once a week. Save your certificate and fly for someone else. The contract for SIC ing there is 24 months, unless you do PFT. PIC contract is $7K just for the Navajo. The Metroliner is operated single pilot. I believe the contract was 24 months at $14k and its is NOT pro-rated. (For the record I worked there as a PIC, I did not PFT or PFJ).
I was there for half a year, you may PM me if you want more details. They may be based in Denver, but you'll be highly encouraged to live at the outstations, espically since on Fridays they don't come back to Denver at night, the next flight back to Denver is Monday evening for MOST routes.
I'd would often write up planes that were signed off as "ops check good" and it would be painfully obvious nothing was done to see if things were fixed. Example: the de-ice boots. When I mentioned this I was told "well you cant always fix things on the first try" even though all you have to do is hit the button to see if they work or not..
The FAA ramp checks those guys A LOT, hell, their office is right next to the cargo ramp at DIA where most planes are parked.
They also played games with my paycheck, such as 'forgetting' when I got a pay raise, yet always noticing when I owed them even $5.
These are the guys that had a near miss with a Frontier A319 at DIA last winter because a metroliner taxiied onto the runway in front of them.
http://www.denverpost.com/watercooler/ci_7529642
Also 7 deaths in 8 years is a bit much.
http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P1-133241945.html