Chicago Weather Alert: Winter Weather Advisory continues in Lake County
The National Weather Service cancelled its advisory for much of the Chicago region including Cook, DeKalb, DuPage, Kane, McHenry, and Will counties.
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Meteorologist Mary Kay Kleist has been a fixture on CBS News Chicago since 2002.
Since joining the station, Kleist became a Certified Broadcast Meteorologist (2007), which is the industry's highest distinction. In addition to earning several local Emmy Awards at CBS News Chicago – including three Emmy Awards in 2015 for coverage of the April tornadoes, a severe weather special and best on-camera weather anchor – Kleist has been awarded an AMS Seal of Approval and an NWA Broadcasting Seal of Approval.
Kleist has been a meteorologist for print, radio and television broadcasts for more than 25 years. She first worked in Chicago from 1994-95 as a weather anchor for WGN-AM Radio and CLTV. However, she joined CBS2 Chicago from WXYZ-TV in Detroit, Michigan, where she had worked as a meteorologist since 1999, reporting weather for the station's weekend newscasts.
Prior to her work at WXYZ-TV, Kleist worked in Tampa, Florida (1995-99), as the meteorologist for WFLA-TV. There, she also reported the weather for The Tampa Tribune, the local edition of CNN Headline News and served as weather anchor at WFLA-AM Radio.
Kleist began her career at WJCL-TV in Savannah, Georgia (1992-94), where she worked as the weekend weather anchor, a health and general assignment reporter, news anchor, photographer, editor, as well as anchor of the local edition of CNN Headline News.
Kleist graduated Magna Cum Laude from the University of Central Florida in 1992 with a B.A. in Radio and Television, and later graduated from the Broadcast Meteorology Program at Mississippi State University.
The National Weather Service cancelled its advisory for much of the Chicago region including Cook, DeKalb, DuPage, Kane, McHenry, and Will counties.
According to CBS 2 meteorologist, the record high for Thursday is 75 degrees set in 2020. We will probably reach that level.
It will turn cloudy tonight as our next system gets closer.
Warm winds will carry temperatures into the 70s the next 2 days.
Dry conditions with winds flowing from the south/southwest, pulling in unseasonably warm air.
The low for Monday night is 44.
According to CBS 2 meteorologist Mary Kay Kleist, skies will clear Monday evening.
We're looking at several days with high temperatures up to 70 degrees.
It'll be dry for trick-or-treaters, with temperatures in the mid 50s Monday evening.
Next rain chance increases during the day Sunday and tapers off with daybreak Monday
Some patchy fog is possible overnight.
There is only an early shower chance on Wednesday.
Waves of rain will bring one to two inches of rain ending Wednesday morning.
Showers taper off Wednesday morning as the system departs.
It was high temperatures again Sunday with highs reaching the upper 70s and near 80 -- a good 20 degrees above average.