Some clarification is needed...
The AMA was pretty much ORDERED by the FAA to deal with non-commercial uses of these things
I'd like to see any proof of that. Normally, it would be completely out of character for the government to do this since they have no money involved (so far) and no authority to tell AMA to do this. And any authority that the FAA does have CANNOT be delegated outside of government. Granted that the current administration has stretched the concept of "rule of law" into an unrecognizable form, but hopefully we will soon return to sanity and normalcy.
Realize that a very successful "enterprise" to get "free money" from the government is to become a "community-based organization". We currently have many of these organizations functioning in the health-care field to sign people up for Obamacare, but also in many other areas outside of health-care. Perhaps the AMA is also chasing this?
So, it sounds more like an excuse out of somebody from AMA to cover their interest in chasing quadcopter money. I would like very much for AMA to adhere to its role of representing model aviation as the supposed educational organization it is.
The hope is that drone fliers will join the AMA and local clubs and learn to fly them responsibly.
Probably the fastest way for a model airplane club to loose it's flying site is to enroll a bunch of quadcopter newbies in its membership. It is one thing for long-time RCers to fly a quadcopter, another for a guy that bought a quadcopter "to have fun". In fact, a week ago the Norfolk guys had to kick some yahoos with a large quadcopter off their flying site before they flew up into Naval air traffic.
The AMA and the commercial quadcopter manufacturers appear to be in complete lockstep. I imagine that that the commercial drone industry is all for the AMA becoming the "community-based organization" in charge of policing drone use, since the AMA will be a lot easier to manipulate to their desires than any of the likely alternatives.
All true, however, with the rise of drone-based commercial services (most likely using quadcopters or similar) the services themselves will create their own representative organizations for lobbying Congress. The equipment that they will use is comparable to automobiles as compared to RC cars with regard to the current quadcopter toy industry. The dynamics will change significantly and AMA needs to be very careful not to get crunched.
Like I said - this could be an interesting spectator sport....