I'd like to point out something I feel any potential new hire should know about working life at Omni:
Earlier this year (in March), the company announced a TDY base in Madrid, Spain in order to cover flying for a long-ish term contract with Boliviana. The company had the option of making the TDY UP TO 90 days, and chose 90 days, right off the bat.
The language in the contract concerning the TDY is incredibly weak and vague in terms of protection for the pilot group, and has led to some real heartburn. As a new hire, you can fully expect to be junior assigned to one of these 90 day TDYs, which have proven very unpopular with FOs (less so for Captain's, for some reason). Here are the details:
-The company will provide a hotel and per diem for the full 90 days. However, they have not used a hotel that would be adequate for a long TDY....they've been using your regular, good-for-an-overnight-stay airport hotel. There are no suites (kitchenettes etc). There are no laundry facilities within walking distance of the hotel.
-You must check out of the hotel before every turn. Some pilots considered bringing over family to stay for a while, but having to check out in this manner makes it unfeasible as family would essentially have to pay for their own room while the pilot is completing his/her Bolivia turn.
-The initial lure for some who bid the TDY was that they built lines with flying that averaged close to 90 hours a month. Productive lines are non existent at Omni, and flying enough to break guarantee is very very rare, so the appeal of making that much overtime while actually flying meant the TDY had some takers. This was great, until they reduced flying with little notice, which greatly reduced block hours flown. This coming January, with the new Part 117 rules, they'll be diluting the flying even more, and you can expect to make little to no overtime pay and essentially only be working for guarantee and per diem.
-Lines are not built in the normal Omni way, which is typically 18 days on and 12-13 days off. Days on and off are split up in a more normal airline way: ie- 3 day trip, followed by 3 to 4 off. This obviously would make jump seating home on off days very difficult and tiring, if not impossible.
In Summary: You'll be gone, overseas, for 90 days and in less then adequate accommodation for such a long stay. There will be little to no opportunity to return home, or to have family come and visit, unless it's all on your own dime. You can expect little to no overtime pay.
While the Union is trying to work with the company to make some improvements in QOL, there's little they can do and the company is taking a "We'll provide the bare minimum that (we interpret) the contract requires us to provide, and not one thing more". This includes making pilots buy their own tickets home from overseas, at great personal expense, in order to tend to a dire family emergency.
Just thought I'd let everyone know.