Those planning on that kind of operation will remain grounded until BLOS regulations are formally adopted, which may be for yet some time to come. Until those regs are in place there won't be much help from companies like Amazon, UPS, and others that will lack incentive to become involved until they could benefit directly.
Last number I recall, IIRC, put federal drone registrations somewhere in the area of 700,000 before the registration requirement was rescinded. The AOPA has ~385,000 members while the AMA has ~180,000 members. The AMA's charter prohibits political lobbying while the AOPA actively engages in political lobbying. The AMA's charter limits support of commercial endeavors while the AOPA supports both commercial and private operations. So one group has considerable advantages over another and throwing the support of the drone community provides one considerably more political clout that the other. One can be proactive in doing something, the other is more reactive than proactive, and their history pretty much verifies that. The AUVSI has proven itself having little or no concern for the hobbyists or small commercial operator, being more focused on showcasing expensive hardware for the government, military, LEA, and large agricultural interests. The Small UAV Coalition brought us the association of Amazon, Go Pro, 3DR, Yuneec, and DJI, who promptly lobbied for rules that were focused primarily on their corporate benefit, not ours. The primary members of the FAA's Drone Advisory Committee were drawn from corporate aerospace, aviation avionics manufacturers, and professional manned aviation groups, with DJI in the distant background. We don't factor into their policy making, and policy making is exactly what they were enlisted to do. We should bear in mind that commercial use of multirotors came into legal status only because a small group of 6 or so multirotor operations focused on the cinema industry came together and lobbied the FAA to come up with rules (Part 333) that permitted their businesses to survive. Imagine what a large, organized group of drone operators could accomplish.
So we can wait and hope someone else will eventually, indirectly, come to our aid or take immediate steps to do something for ourselves. Waiting for someone else would leave us at their mercy, having to hope and accept what they need for themselves would spill over to us in whatever areas might apply. We could end up with nothing, being excluded from a process intended solely to benefit corporate interests, which is what typically happens when big money is handed the reins of control.