A few weeks ago, I featured a meta post: Vote Early, Vote Often to encourage folks to vote. Today, I got sick of seeing it (and not noticing any effect), so I removed the featured tag. This is the result:

Now I think the reason is that when I removed the tag, it bumped the question, which caused the algorithm to pick it as a "hot discussion" item. (Yes, our meta is so slow that the mere act of removing a tag can make a meta post "hot".)
Initially, I was going to suggest a tweak in the algorithm, but it occured to me that the problem really is that the community can't control what gets posted there. For instance, I'm not sure how interested our users are in Stack Overflow blog posts. (And if they are interested, it's because they are SO users already.) Most offices, schools, hospitals, etc. have strict rules on what gets nailed up and requires notes that don't meet the criteria to be taken down. Nobody, not even ♦ moderators, can do that on Stack Exchange.
Don't get me wrong: I like the automated posting feature. For many sites, it should work well with a few tweaks here and there. But the bulletin will be more useful if it can be curated by some actual person who knows the community and its needs. At a minimum (and this might be all that is needed) moderators should be able to remove notifications that don't speak to their community.