Last night when I was tuning the AM dial, I heard that WWL ran an EAS test around 1:45am. On the test, the announcers read that this was a coordinated monthly test of the broadcasters in the Louisiana area and went on to say that "if this is an actual emergency, such as floods, tornados, evacuations, toxic spills, or any other emergency situations, the message would have been followed by an alert tone". It did not even mention hurricanes, since this is arguably fits the emergency category and qualifies for an EAS activation. This was picked up by skywave signal from Pennsylvania and their signal is decent.
In late 2002, when Hurricane Isadore was approaching the Louisiana coast, WWL was known on-air as the "Emergency Alert Station", providing evacuation infos, road closures, updated hurricane informations and more. Now that everyone is bringing up memories about Katrina, I need to know why are several N.O. broadcast stations refusing to run EAS warnings. Here in PA, I heard several ones for flash floods, tornadoes, and child abductions, but from what I heard, WWL never ran an EAS warning about Hurricane Katrina. Katrina is now considered the deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history, almost topping out Andrew that struck Florida in '92.
I am just curious if any N.O. stations besides WWL ran last night's EAS test.
In late 2002, when Hurricane Isadore was approaching the Louisiana coast, WWL was known on-air as the "Emergency Alert Station", providing evacuation infos, road closures, updated hurricane informations and more. Now that everyone is bringing up memories about Katrina, I need to know why are several N.O. broadcast stations refusing to run EAS warnings. Here in PA, I heard several ones for flash floods, tornadoes, and child abductions, but from what I heard, WWL never ran an EAS warning about Hurricane Katrina. Katrina is now considered the deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history, almost topping out Andrew that struck Florida in '92.
I am just curious if any N.O. stations besides WWL ran last night's EAS test.