Hi all,
With impending severe weather in the forecast for my area this afternoon, it has me thinking about this question. How does the EAS system actually work? From what I've been able to gather, the equipment picks up a signal from a primary station and interrupts the regular programming. So, how can the following scenarios be explained?
1. It's July 2012, and I'm in the Spokane market. We have a day of severe thunderstorms, with EAS alerts going off every 10-15 minutes. The last alert of the day, for a storm well to my east into Montana, goes off at about 4:30. I heard it on 96.9, so flip over to co-owned 94.5 and hear the same alert maybe half a second behind. I can't remember the exact timeline, but I eventually land on 96.1, and hear the same alert there a few minutes later.
2. A couple years ago, I'm listening to a baseball game, when with two outs in the bottom of the 9th, an EAS alert goes off alerting of a severe thunderstorm affecting some foothill communities to my southeast. The batter must have fowled off a couple of pitches as the game was still going on when the alert ends. The game ends, and I start tuning around. The station I was listening to is owned by Alpha. I didn't hear anything on the iHeart stations, and the Audacy stations are running the alert as I pass by.
Why wouldn't all stations be carrying the alert at the same time? There are also numerous EAS tests I could cite as examples.
With impending severe weather in the forecast for my area this afternoon, it has me thinking about this question. How does the EAS system actually work? From what I've been able to gather, the equipment picks up a signal from a primary station and interrupts the regular programming. So, how can the following scenarios be explained?
1. It's July 2012, and I'm in the Spokane market. We have a day of severe thunderstorms, with EAS alerts going off every 10-15 minutes. The last alert of the day, for a storm well to my east into Montana, goes off at about 4:30. I heard it on 96.9, so flip over to co-owned 94.5 and hear the same alert maybe half a second behind. I can't remember the exact timeline, but I eventually land on 96.1, and hear the same alert there a few minutes later.
2. A couple years ago, I'm listening to a baseball game, when with two outs in the bottom of the 9th, an EAS alert goes off alerting of a severe thunderstorm affecting some foothill communities to my southeast. The batter must have fowled off a couple of pitches as the game was still going on when the alert ends. The game ends, and I start tuning around. The station I was listening to is owned by Alpha. I didn't hear anything on the iHeart stations, and the Audacy stations are running the alert as I pass by.
Why wouldn't all stations be carrying the alert at the same time? There are also numerous EAS tests I could cite as examples.