A NUAIR press release lists the NY Test Site's technology and testing partners. "Oneida County and the New York UAS Test Site have partnered with multiple local, national and international organizations to complete the work outlined in UPP Phase 2, including: Aerodyne Measure, AiRXOS, Albany County Sheriff's Office, ANRA Technologies, AX Enterprize, Flytrex, Johns Hopkins University – Applied Physics Lab (on behalf of the FAA TCAS Program Office), NUAIR, Oneida County Sheriff's Department, OneSky, ResilienX, Skyward, Syracuse Fire Department and TruWeather Solutions," says the press release. This list represent drone software and services companies, international UTM providers focused on different aspects of the problem, engineering consultants, drone delivery companies, law enforcement and public safety, researchers, and more. It's a list that indicates the complexity of UTM implementation – and the need for this kind of collaboration in developing it.
A fully functioning, fully implemented UTM system designed to handle thousands of delivery or passenger drones in the air at a time is some way off. However, considering the very recent growth of the commercial drone industry, UTM development is happening relatively quicly. Some parts of a UTM system – like the Low Altitude Authorization and Notification Capability (LAANC), which allows pilots to communicate with the FAA through an app, are already in place.
This next phase will continue to move the process forward. "Data collected from UPP Phase 2 tests will help inform a cross-agency unmanned traffic management (UTM) system implementation plan, says the NUAIR press relase.
"The collaborative work we will achieve with our industry-leading partners will help shape the commercial drone industry on a national, if not international level," says Tony Basile, chief operations officer of NUAIR.