FoxHunter said:
Rules and Positions change!
ALPA 1968
Vol. 19, No.19 May 8, 1968
ALPA CONTINUES OPPOSITION TO AGE 60 RETIREMENT—The Air Line Pilots Association strongly advocates that the Federal Air Regulation in its arbitrary age 60 retirement provisions is unreasonably discriminating against all of the airline pilots.
...
ALPA has expended and continues to expend its utmost efforts in attempting to overcome this highly dissatisfying and unfair federal regulation.
So, what does this prove? That ALPA is the culprit? Not hardly.
The culprit is capricious rule chages in the middle of the game.
I've been thinking through a football analogy -- bear with me here...
Air Force is playing Navy, and it's a good, tight game. The clock ticks to zero with matching scores on the board. A coin toss begins the first overtime, and Air Force gets the first possession. Unable to make the end zone, the Falcons settle for a field goal. Now, as you all know, college football overtimes give both teams a possession, and a difference in score at the conclusion of 2 possessions will indicate a winner; a tied score sends the game to another overtime. But today, the President of the NCAA steps on the field and declares the game is now over, the victory goes to USAFA. As of this moment, NFL overtime rules apply, and the sudden-death winner is Air Force.
(OK, I rigged the story, but I'll even it out later, OK?)
ALPA rushes in and says, "Wait, that's not fair. These teams were playing under a defined set of rules, they planned the game based on the rules, Navy won the toss and deferred to Air Force based on an understanding of those rules, and now you're arbitrarily changing them during the course of the game. Sudden-death playoffs is unfair."
(OK, so ALPA doesn't have much experience representing NCAA football teams, but it's just a story, OK?)
ALPA fights this thing all the way to the supreme judiciary body of the NCAA (whatever that might be) and repeats over and over, Sudden-death playoffs is unfair. ALPA loses. Sudden-death playoffs becomes the new rule for NCAA football.
20 years later...
The annual rematch of the boys from Aluminum U. and Canoe U. reaches the end of regulation play with another tie score. It's the first time they've tied since the famous playoff debacle that led to the change of the playoff rule those many long years ago. Navy wins the toss and manages to draw blood on a 23-yard field goal by the Plebe from Colorado Springs. (It's good to have irony in a story, right?) Amidst the ensuing celebration we see the new chief muckety-muck of the NCAA running across the field waving his hands and shouting, "Wait! Wait! Now it's Air Force's turn!" What? Yes, it's Air Force's turn. Now they get a chance to score. Both teams get one possession, and we'll check the score at the end of that to see where we go from there. Each team should have an equal number of possessions in overtime play.
Stunned, the teams take the field again. The Midshipmen are shaken by the sudden change of rules, and their celebratory mood still clouds their brains as the Doolie linebacker from Annapolis (is that too much irony?) cuts to the left, breaks a tackle, then runs up the middle to the end zone. (Oh, I'm sorry. Did I say I would even out the fortunes? Sorry. Sue me.

) The Cadet Wing celebrates the victory with free weekend passes for all.
Anybody care to guess what position ALPA will take this time? The position of fairness, of course. This time it's fair to object to the use of the old NCAA-style overtime rules. Both teams were playing under the assumption that the win would go to the team that scored first. Had Navy known that there would be equal possession, they might have deferred the first possession to Air Force, so they would know whether they should go for the touchdown, or if a field goal would suffice. Changing the rules midstream made their planning ineffective.
Could you fault ALPA at this point for having said all those many years ago, "Sudden-death playoffs is unfair."?
I don't think so.
Changing the rules has a profound impact on many aspects of the pilot's welfare, with compensation being merely the tip of the iceberg. That ALPA is resistant to suddenly changing the rule, in either direction, is not problematic to me. What worries me is folks that want to change it without taking any of the other issues into account.