The Los Angeles Times reports that Uber, the ridesharing company, plans to extend its reach into the stratosphere by developing an “on-demand air transportation service.” The plan appears to be that customers will use Uber’s surface transportation ride hailing system to hop a ride to a “vertiport” where an electrically powered aircraft will carry passengers to another vertiport at which they will be met by another phalanx of Uber drivers waiting to take otherwise stranded customers off the roofs of parking garages and into the traffic they supposedly avoided by using the proposed above ground transportation option.
For example, once an aircraft leaves the ground, FAA takes control, see, e.g., 49 U.S.C. § 40103(b)(1) and (2), and coordinates with other aircraft using the same airspace in order to avoid collision. The skies in large cities which might benefit from Uber’s scheme such as New York, are already filled with numerous aircraft on approach and departure from the various airports. Since vertiports presumably won’t have their own air traffic control towers, it is difficult to imagine the way in which this new species of aircraft, with an on-demand operating schedule, rather than one defined in advance, will be integrated into the existing system.