I've heard this repeatedly over the past few months: they allow the entire EAS message to seize air, complete with fax-connecting noises and mechanical voice.
This used to be a giant No-No, because:
1. It takes longer for the automated alert to take air than if a human broke into programming (if necessary)
2. The automated alerts are sometimes hard to understand, incomplete, or may contain information irrelevant to the listeners
3. It makes the station sound totally unattended.
Obviously, the company running these stations has shaved off enough of its employees that there are no longer live humans to handle important local information. The fact that they let EAS alerts grab air, and (apparently) don't preview the alert, decide what is important to get on the air, and have a host/DJ/operator present it live, is pathetic. It is the ultimate sign that most stations no longer really "serve the public interest", a definition that is no longer really enforced.
Apparently, some don't even serve the stockholders' interest, as evidenced by this business story from the hometown newspaper of one large radio company:
http://www.mysanantonio.com/business/49275922.html
radioguy555 said:
WFLZ aired tornado warnings between almost every song for a while yesterday afternoon. I believe it was Tommy Chuck (the PD) who broke in to the syndicated Seacrest show with live updates.
There are apparently still some people in the industry who "get it". Unfortunately, they are few and far between. Perhaps he could teach the "News Station" a few things....