I do have to agree with cybourg12 on some aspects. Don can vouch for this: I was a FIRM believer in the targetted low timer programs. Heck I was gung ho for MAPD, which woulda put me in a shiny CRJ with a whopping 260 hours. Now that I have the time instructing under my belt, I know I woulda been getting my butt handed to me on a daily basis. Just b/c these guys get jobs doesn't mean they are performing well. Ask some of the checkairmen at our airline here. This e-mail came out, and there are some that are thinking of dropping their checkairmen status now. They've seen it all before and thought it was over. The sad fact is, most airlines don't care who's in the seat as long as the flight is relatively on-time and the pilots don't call in sick. If they had their way, everyone would live in base, on airport reserve or have a killer immune system.
Back to the pay issue: with 500 hours, what options do these guys have? Take the low paying job with a regional that has an agreement with their school or fight trying to find one of the other jobs. Most of these guys sign up for the bridge programs NOT to better qualify themselves for a job, but to get a short cut. Plain and simple. ATP, FSI and the other schools take advantage of these people's hurry in order to cash in, and it's working. In my situation, I spent about $5K less for my three CFI ratings than I would have for MAPD's PACE program. Sure, it took my 7 months of instructing to hit the hours to qualify for a regional job, but that's money I don't have to pay back on the FO salary. Plus, with the added hours, I have something bridge guys don't: options. Let's say someone went to ATP's program and got hired in Aprial with XJT at 600 hours. Now, let's say CHQ gets those 69 planes and XJT doesn't have anything else for this person. Guess what? He's gonna get furloughed with maybe 800 TT (200 turbine) and be out on the street. Some of the other guys in his class might have had twice the time he did, so now he has to compete with them, this time WITHOUT the bridge program's help. This brings up another flaw in the bridge programs, with the turbulent state of the industry, those extra hours you get CFIing, flying jumpers, towing banners or whatever is your insurance in case you lose your job somehow. If PCL winds up furloughing due to lost flights to Compass, I still have the option of starting over again at another regional (like Skywest, ASA, or anyone else that might be hiring). The person that did the bridge program and got hired with 500 hours is out on the street with no CFI ratings, an uphill competition for the jobs out there, and a loan to pay back.
THAT was the main reason I decided against MAPD.