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FOREWARD

The famous James H. “Jimmy” Doolittle, first to fly an aircraft entirely on instruments, racing trophy winner, World War II hero, and an honorary member of the Air Line Pilots Association, was an extraordinary figure in the history of aviation. In the sunset of his life, while I was working with him on his autobiography (I Could Never Be So Lucky Again), I asked him why he waited until he reached his mid-90s to tell his life story. He replied, “There is an optimum time to write history. That is after the emotions have cooled down and before memory has started to fade. Very frequently when an individual writes history immediately after the event, he is still knowingly or unknowingly emotionally involved. I think only after those emotions have cooled down can you have a real rationalization. Rational thinking and emotions don’t go together.”

Past, present, and future members of ALPA will find that this second book on the history of their union follows this premise. The emotions of the past have cooled somewhat, and it represents the “rational thinking” of many leading participants as stated by a professional historian, George E. Hopkins, Ph.D., who, in 1982, wrote Flying the Line: The First Half Century of the Air Line Pilots Association. That book covered the air mail pilots’ strike of 1919, the Association’s subsequent founding in 1931, and the incumbency of the first three presidents to the midpoint of Capt. J.J. O’Donnell’s 12-year term.

This volume explores in great depth the Association’s history from that time through the incumbency of Capt. Henry A. Duffy and the assumption of the ALPA presidency by Capt. Randolph Babbitt. It takes the reader behind the scenes of the political battles that were fought internally and presents a rare, uninhibited evaluation of the motives, emotions, and personalities involved in the traumatic issues that threatened to destroy the organization.

As Hopkins explains in his preface, he is a Navy-trained pilot who nearly became an airline pilot but elected to pursue a career as a historian. He examines the internal political workings and hidden mechanisms of ALPA from an informed, omniscient viewpoint that is rarely found in a history of any organization, much less that of a labor union. After interviews with, and having the consent of, ALPA’s past leaders, he reveals and comments freely on their quarrels with pilot groups before and after the passage of the Airline Deregulation Act of 1978. Here will be found frank revelations of the power of the “elephant” pilot groups and the influence that “ants” have had on the union’s recent history. And the reader will see the disruptions that occur and the bitterness between pilot groups about seniority that has proven inevitable when airlines merge. Those who have read Flying the Line, Vol. I, will recall the villainy of E.L. Cord in his dealings with pilots in the 1930s. They will see that there was a modern-day equivalent in the person of Francisco Lorenzo, who willfully and ruthlessly broke the laws of labor/management relations and was determined to destroy ALPA as a viable union. ALPA spent $200 million to fight the war against this tyrant and finally witness his downfall. The book contains a straightforward examination of the motivations of some of the airline pilot group leaders during this dismal period and their influence on the transition of leadership from O’Donnell to Duffy as well as the behind-the-scenes political machinations that led to Duffy’s victory by a mere 129 votes. The rise and influence of Randolph Babbitt in ALPA’s internal affairs and his controversial election to the presidency are discussed with equal candor.

Pilots who have joined ALPA in recent years will learn the origin and meaning of such terms as suspension of service, labor protective provisions, blue skies contract, Mutual Aid Pact, Project Acceleration, B-scale wages, withdrawal of enthusiasm, stovepipe standalone seniority lists, Major Contingency Fund, family awareness programs, and ALPA’s fragmentation policy. And readers will grasp what Capt. Frank Mayne, former ALPA executive vice-president, meant when he said, “Whatever goes wrong, ALPA will get the blame. Whatever goes right, the company will get the credit.”

Members will gain an assessment of the role of the Reagan and Bush Administrations and the judiciary in labor negotiations and in the disastrous effects of deregulation on the pilot profession. There are interesting “names” encountered here, including such unlikely personalities as Donald Trump and Michael Milken, Lorenzo’s junk bond friend who was convicted of security fraud and sentenced to 10 years in prison.

Nowhere else will readers get such a valuable, unvarnished, inside view of the downfall of Braniff and Eastern, two of the nation’s proud airlines, and the sad effects that mergers caused for airline employees. Hopkins traces the troubles and the drastic changes in the industry to a new breed of corporate wheeler-dealers who had no airline experience and minimal qualifications for leadership and who gleefully tried to break the unions. Men like Lorenzo typified everything that is wrong about airline deregulation and caused Sen. Ted Kennedy, a one-time proponent, to admit that deregulation has been a failure.

As a staff member and editor of Air Line Pilot, I was privileged to witness, but not to participate in, many of the political events discussed so vividly in the following chapters. My first experience with ALPA might be said to have been when I met my flying instructor at Army Air Corps primary flight school in 1941. He was Verne Treat, known as “Mr. U” on that list of ALPA’s founding members who had to keep their identities secret and are listed on that impressive brass plaque in the lobby of ALPA’s Herndon, Va., office. He would not discuss those early days with cadets, but he taught me the basics of piloting, and I owe a successful, accident-free flying career to his instructional skills. When I joined the ALPA staff 36 years later, I learned why his name is so permanently memorialized. That is revealed in Hopkins’s The Airline Pilots: A Study in Elite Unionization and reinforced in Flying the Line. I had joined an organization with a proud heritage formed by men of great courage and vision.

This current work of Hopkins should be required reading for all present and future ALPA members. It is a study of crisis and effect and contains priceless lessons that can be learned from past mistakes and successes. The book illustrates the lasting truth of the author’s statement that “no victory ever stays won” and should be an incentive for members to get involved in the internal affairs of their union and use the experience of the past as preparation for the future.

C.V. Glines
Former Editor
Air Line Pilot

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