Severe weather threat mainly exists in southwest North Texas counties
Flood Watch will remain in effect until 1 p.m. Sunday.
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Jeff joined CBS 11 and TXA 21 in December 2010. He is the senior Meteorologist on staff and can be seen covering various shifts across the week or on the weekend evenings. He also serves as one of the primary reporters for the CBS series "Climate Connection". Jeff visits area schools weekly as part of the Weather on Wheels program.
Born in Lubbock, Jeff spent most of his childhood in Tennessee. He holds a degree in Communications from the University of Texas at Austin as well as a bachelor's degree in broadcast meteorology from Mississippi State. His master's degree in science education comes from the University of Missouri.
Jeff's broadcast career spans over 35 years. Jeff and his wife Fawn (a chiropractor in Colleyville) have two sons. The oldest is serving in Alaska on the USCGC Alex Haley in the Bering Sea. The youngest is finishing up high school and plans for a career in the Coast Guard as a marine biologist.
If you would like Jeff to come talk to your group about how changing weather patterns are changing the way we garden in this area, please email him at jaray@viacomcbs.com.
Flood Watch will remain in effect until 1 p.m. Sunday.
Several rounds of storms and heavy rain are in store for North Texas over the next five days.
Monday and Tuesday look warm and storm-free. It will be breezy on Tuesday and a little more humid.
We are watching everything east of the I-35 corridor for severe weather development Sunday afternoon.
Flood Watch is in effect through tomorrow.
More heavy spring rain is in the forecast and is expected to arrive between Friday and Saturday.
A 600-acre nature habitat in Cedar Hill is bringing native birds back to North Texas despite a growing metro area.
There is a near-perfect afternoon in store for NorthTexas on Monday.
The rain hit the Metroplex head on. The heaviest rain fell in the morning but was rather steady after that.
A Weather Alert is out for Monday evening and overnight.
WEATHER ALERT issued for Monday night into the overnight hours.
Mostly cloudy skies for the eclipse Monday with some breaks in the cloud cover possible during the event.
Some breaks in low-level clouds are possible during the event. WEATHER ALERTS are in place for Monday afternoon after the eclipse into Tuesday.
A cold front sweeps across North Texas Saturday night. Looking ahead to just after the eclipse, we're looking at the possibility of two rounds of severe weather on Monday.
The atmosphere Monday is primed to produce large hail and damaging winds.