I don't follow. UTC with no more leap second updates isn't a new version. It's the same timebase, just without any future updates to the leap second table. If the folk that maintain UTC decide to stop adding or subtracting leap seconds, it's not a fork in the timebase.
That fork already happened with TAI. TAI was the same as universal time in 1958, and has progressed without any leap seconds. The current offset between TAI and UTC is 37 seconds. We could all agree to switch unix time to TAI, but there would be a 37 second discontinuity.
I currently work on autonomous aircraft, and we use GPS time internally for avionics. The monotonicity is very nice for correctness when developing real time code. Outside of avionics, it's very confusing for people that tend to work in UTC. I've written table based timebase converters a few times now.