A little cooler with a shot of moisture in the form of rain and snow
We are watching a weak cold front and a Pacific disturbance mixing together overnight Wednesday into Thursday morning.
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First Alert Chief Meteorologist Dave Aguilera grew up in Colorado. He is an Emmy Award winner who was born in Pueblo. He has worked in every television market in the state and has been at CBS Colorado a long time .. since 1993!
Having lived through and reported on many major weather events, including everything from droughts and floods to blizzards and tornadoes and has seen how the weather deeply affects people. He has been a TV and Radio broadcaster in Colorado and the Rocky Mountain Region since 1986.
He is, perhaps foremost, an optimist, which is a good thing to be when people tend to blame you for the bad weather. But no matter what the sky is doing, Dave looks forward to coming to work, and he always tries to bring a little sunshine into the lives of his audience, no matter what it's doing outside.
As far back as his senior year in high school, Dave knew he wanted to work in television, but he assumed it would be delivering news. After graduating in 1987 from Colorado State University/Pueblo (formerly University of Southern Colorado) with a Bachelor of Science degree in mass communications/journalism, he found his direction shifting. His interests were definitely looking up - literally. Everything Dave wanted to know was now in the sky. He went on to earn a Certificate in Broadcast Meteorology from Mississippi State University.
He holds the American Meteorological Society's Certified Broadcast Meteorologist (CBM) designation, a professional recognition of the quality of his weather broadcasts. Among radio and television meteorologists, the CBM designation is sought as a mark of distinction and recognition.
Dave is a member of the National Weather Association and the American Meteorology Society and holds the Television Seal of Approval from both organizations.
Dave has won several Heartland Regional Emmys and Colorado Broadcasters Association Meteorologist of the Year.
Dave has worked as a weather anchor at KRQE-TV in Albuquerque, New Mexico; KOAA-TV in Pueblo/Colorado Springs, Colorado; and at KREX-TV in Grand Junction, Colorado. He also worked as a news reporter/anchor for KHOW-Radio and KOA-Radio in Denver, and as a Disc Jockey for KCCY, KRYT and KDZA, in Pueblo. In September 1993, Dave accomplished the goal he had set for himself in college by joining CBS News Colorado as a meteorologist.
Dave participates in and emcees numerous fundraising events for nonprofit groups throughout the year. He feels the community has given him so much and this is his way to give back.
In fact, in 2018 Dave was inducted into the Pueblo South High School Hall of Fame for his work in broadcasting and helping the community.
His hopes for the future are to continue to work for CBS News Colorado. Living in Denver, which he thinks is the "greatest city in the country," means playing golf when the weather is nice, skiing when it's snowing, and giving people the First Alert when the weather gets rough.
Just The Facts
Role model: My mother
Dream job: Indy race car driver
What keeps you in Colorado? This is home, born & raised here
Alma Mater: Colorado State University - Pueblo, Mississippi State University, Starkville
Star sign: Leo
Year hired: 1993
First TV appearance: 1987, KOAA-TV, Pueblo
Hobbies: Golf, racquetball, coaching his kids basketball, football and soccer teams
Favorite food: Anything on my plate
Favorite musicians: Jon Batiste, Carlos Santana, Billy Joel
Favorite sports team: Denver Broncos
Favorite vacation spot: Disney World
Favorite word: Graupel
Favorite noise: Rain on the roof
You can contact Dave by sending an email to yourreporter@cbs.com.
We are watching a weak cold front and a Pacific disturbance mixing together overnight Wednesday into Thursday morning.
The combination of a cold Arctic surge and moisture driven jet stream from the west is bringing in a bout with slick roads over the Front Range and eastern plains for Friday night into Saturday morning.
A chilly change to close out the week for Friday. A cold front has pushed in over the eastern plains of our home state with a push of moisture flowing in from the west pushed along by a westerly jet stream.
One of the wettest storms to ever hit Colorado in February moves away Saturday night. Sunday will be much drier.
With no big blasts of snow this week our overall snowpack numbers have trickled down a bit from the big boost last weeks cold wave produced.
Over the last week our January blast of Winter weather has buried many Colorado mountains with 1 to over 4 feet of snow.
After a somewhat slow start to the snow season, southwestern Colorado is wasting no time in this New Year to catch up. The big winner for snow since the middle of last week is the Wolf Creek Ski Area. With over 3 and half feet of snow since last Thursday.
Coloradoans are urged to stay indoors as frigid temperatures, dangerous wind chills, and periods of snow continue. A First Alert Weather Day remains in effect through Tuesday morning.
First Alert Weather: Expect temperatures to plummet tonight in Colorado
Monday is a CBSColorado First Alert Weather Day for snow and strong winds over the Denver metro area and all of eastern Colorado. With blizzard conditions for some areas.
Our First Alert Weather team is watching 3 weather systems set to change Colorado's current pattern over the next several days. An Albuquerque Low, Friday cold front and a deep Alaskan low pressure area.
There is still a Winter Weather Advisory in place over the extreme eastern areas of the the state for Yuma and Kit Carson Counties through 5pm Wednesday. With about another inch of snow along with up to 45 mph wind gusts.
We have a First Alert Weather Day posted for Blizzard or Blizzard-like conditions spreading all day from Castle Rock and Parker out across the plains to Kansas and Nebraska.
After 1-2 inches of snow mainly on the grass Saturday night, the remainder of the holiday weekend will be mostly dry but cloudy and cold.
The First Alert Weather Center is watching two storm systems that are expected to team up this weekend bringing in snow for Colorado Friday night into Christmas Day.