$\DeclareMathOperator\CSS{CSS}$It is well known that for a set $A$ of integers, if $\gcd(A) = d$, then the set of (integer) linear combinations of $A$ is $d\mathbb{Z}$. I'm looking for a probability generalization of this, namely the following.
Let $\varepsilon>0$, a finite set $A$ of positive integers with $\gcd(A) = d$. Let $N$ be large (depending on $A$, $\varepsilon$) and $\alpha\in A^N$ such that the density of every $a\in A$ in $\alpha$ satisfies $\lvert\alpha^{-1}(a)\rvert/N\geq \varepsilon$. Let $\CSS(\alpha)$ (consecutive sum set) denote the set of $b\in\mathbb{N}$ such that for some $n$, $m$, $b = \alpha(n)+\alpha(n+1)+\dotsb+\alpha(n+m-1)$.
Question: Do we have $\lvert\CSS(\alpha) \rvert/\sum_n\alpha(n)\geq (1-\varepsilon)/d$?