Think Progress has this story on how the City of Philadelphia was denied the $6M they requested to beef up their first responder equipment. The story via the Inky:
The Philadelphia Police Department learned Monday that it was turned down for a $6 million grant to wire the city's rail tunnels so police, firefighters and paramedics could use their radios underground.The full list of the twenty-six recipients here [14kb .pdf].
Instead, 26 other cities will share $92.8 million from the U.S. Department of Justice.
Some of the grant recipients were obvious choices, like New York City ($6 million), Phoenix ($6 million), and Atlanta ($6 million).
Some were not: Pocatello ($1.9 million), Bismarck ($2.3 million), Davenport, Iowa ($2.2 million), and Las Cruces, N.M. ($981,360).
Philadelphia is the fifth largest city in America. Bigger than: Phoenix which recieved just under $6M, Atlanta which recieved $6M, Providence, RI which recieved $5.6M... the list goes on.
The Inky article notes:
Two years ago, the city purchased a $62 million radio system for all police, fire and paramedic units, as well as other city agencies. But the city did not have the money to wire tunnels with repeaters that could transmit messages underground.Good to know that in the event of a large scale emergency, our first responders will still have their low-tech, low-range, analog amplification devices a.k.a. hands around the mouth to use underground. Thanks!
Among the low-tech solutions: supplying police and fire units with different SEPTA radios that work underground.
Or relaying information in emergencies by yelling commands. "That's how they have to operate," [Councilman Frank] Rizzo said. "They literally have to have officers 50 feet apart, hollering back and forth."
Department of Justice, I present you, The Philly Boo.

Bismark?
Yikes. Big ups to the Philly congressional delegation; thanks for nothing??