Very interesting - unfortunatly none in the Tampa area though!
I found this interesting: "You must also be completely comfortable flying from the right seat in varying weather conditions including gusty crosswind takeoffs and landings. "
Why do you have to fly from the right seat? Wouldn't it make more sense to fly from the left seat and have the traffic reporter on the right???
This was interesting too:
Please also understand that somebody who's fresh out of ERAU isn't going to work. Flying (as opposed to instructing) from the right seat out of a 3000' runway in 20+ knot crosswinds, reading the weather through the windshield, and dealing with Washington area airspace and security issues are a far cry from instructing out of an airport with a bunch of 5000'+ runways where one is always pointed into the wind. That program may be fine for an airline where you're never going to see short runways and crosswinds and you're always going to have somebody else in the cockpit and a huge support staff to cover you, but for the real world of GA down here in the trenches it's just not useful.
Please also understand that I cannot, under any circumstances, use someone who's fresh out of ERAU. Just because they told you that you know everything doesn't mean it's true. Been there & done that. I've been disappointed by enough of these people to crew an entire airline.