Below-zero wind chills in Chicago
A cold weather advisory is in effect until noon.
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Meteorologist Kylee Miller is designated as a Certified Broadcast Meteorologist and a Certified Digital Meteorologist by the American Meteorological Society.
Growing up in Michigan, Kylee attended Early College Alliance at Eastern Michigan University for her junior and senior years of high school, earning an associate degree during that time.
She then pursued meteorology at Central Michigan University, graduating with a bachelor's degree in meteorology, a minor in math, and an emphasis in broadcasting.
Kylee is an Emmy Award-winning meteorologist by the Regional Southeast Emmy Chapter, covering "Tornado Aftermath," and was Emmy-nominated for covering "Deadly Flooding Aftermath" in the Carolinas. In 2024, she was honored at CMU with the 10 within 10 alumni award which recognizes exceptional achievements after graduation. She also received the Midwest Communications, Inc. broadcasting scholarship through the Michigan Association of Broadcasters.
Kylee joins the First Alert Weather team at CBS Chicago from CBS Detroit. She has also worked at Fox Carolina, Saginaw/Flint, Lansing, and WeatherNation with national and Caribbean experience. While Kylee has forecasted all different weather types, she has also taught meteorology courses at Eastern Michigan University and has been featured at CMU and EMU, helping promote the weather curricula.
In Kylee's spare time, she enjoys working out, shopping, boating, spending time with family and friends, watching all her favorite sports teams, storm chasing, and forecasting weather! Catch Meteorologist Kylee Miller's forecast on CBS News Chicago, and you can follow Kylee on Facebook, X, and Instagram.
A cold weather advisory is in effect until noon.
Actual air temperatures Sunday night will dip to a low around -2, while highs Monday afternoon will peak toward 10 degrees.
Light fluffy snowflakes are expected overnight, with lows in the teens feeling like the single digits.
The figures are in and 2024 was the hottest year ever recorded for Chicago, for the U.S., and across the globe. The eight warmest years for the U.S. have all occurred since 2012.
It will be mostly sunny Wednesday with highs in the low 20s, with wind chills between 5 to 10 degrees.
Due to a northwesterly wind, wind chills will range from -5 to -15 degrees overnight throughout the start of Tuesday morning.
Overnight Sunday into Monday, temperatures are expected to drop to the low teens, but due to breezy conditions, wind chill values will drop as low as -5 late Sunday night through Monday morning.
Expect a few snow flurries today before snow showers arrive after midnight tonight due to a clipper system.
Even though the wind won't be very strong, it will still feel like the single digits stepping outside for wind chills Wednesday night into Thursday morning.
Wednesday will be the coldest day this week with highs only topping out in the lower 20s at best.
Everyone is still advised to be careful of slick area roads and sidewalks with ice patches.
The most significant lake-effect snow is expected in Lake County, Illinois, with generally 3 to 5 inches of snow possible.
Have you ever looked up in the sky and noticed colored spots on either one or both sides of the sun? If so, you probably saw a sun dog, also known as parhelia or mock sun.
Models still favor a southerly track to the winter storm from Sunday into Monday.
Snow totals range from a dusting to 2 inches farther south of Chicago.