NEXT Weather: Turning windy, cloudy Monday AM morning sun
After a rainy and foggy cap on the weekend, our NEXT Weather team forecasts that skies will slowly clear out Monday, as the main area of low pressure moves away from the east coast.
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"Weather has been my passion since childhood when my grandfather took me flying, and after seeing my first tornado, I was hooked for life and simply can't imagine doing anything else."
Tammie Souza is one of a handful of women nationwide that holds both the prestigious CBM (AMS) Certified Broadcast Meteorology Seal of Approval awarded by the American Meteorological Society, and the NWA Seal of Approval from the National Weather Association. Both seals represent rigorous educational requirements in atmospheric science and the highest level of competency in communicating complex weather, climate change, and science. She was also selected as the first female chairman of the National AMS Board of Broadcast Meteorology, she has served on various national boards for both organizations, and is currently an evaluator for AMS/CBM and NWA Seal applicants.
She holds a Master's degree in Applied Meteorology from Mississippi State University, a Bachelor's degree in Biology/Environmental Science from San Diego State University and a certification in Broadcast Meteorology.
A trained storm chaser and spotter, she loves sharing pictures and stories from her trips. Climate Change and Environmental issues have also been an important part of her work.
Before joining CBS News Philadelphia, Souza was the Chief Meteorologist at WCAU-NBC10 here in Philadelphia and has worked with CBS sister station WBBM in Chicago. Her career path includes weekend meteorologist at WMAQ-NBC Chicago and weekday morning meteorologist at WFLD-FOX Chicago. She was the first female Chief Meteorologist in Tampa/St Petersburg at WTSP, and a weekday meteorologist for WDJT in Milwaukee. Along the way, she has covered tornadoes, blizzards, hurricanes, floods, heatwaves, earthquakes, and wildfires.
Honored with 9 Emmy awards including Best Weathercast, Best Science Story, and live reporting from the California Wildfires. She has also been recognized with an Associated Press Award for scuba diving on a 125-year-old Shipwreck, a Chicago Headline Club Award for escaping a submerged car, and a national NABJ award nominee for the Mystery of Lake Michigan's Underground Railroad Ships.
Tammie became a warrior for Pediatric Brain Tumor Research after her young son Caleb survived a brain tumor.
She is also involved with Disaster Relief, Pet Adoption, and STEM education including "Weather-With-Class" a series of weather and science presentations for schools.
Interests include her Spanish-Portuguese heritage, organic gardening, snow skiing, scuba diving, flying, and watching football, baseball, and hockey. She loves travel and has spent time as an exchange student to Japan and was a good will ambassador to Portugal.
Weather runs in the family. Her sister was a broadcast meteorologist, her brother is an airline pilot and her father worked on the NASA space program. Born in Pennsylvania she lives in Montgomery County with her husband and son.
After a rainy and foggy cap on the weekend, our NEXT Weather team forecasts that skies will slowly clear out Monday, as the main area of low pressure moves away from the east coast.
Fog gives way to clouds on this warmer-than-average December day. It'll be dreary, but we're not expecting rainfall.
Clouds roll into the Philadelphia region Friday before showers this afternoon, giving way to a warm Saturday.
Plasma particles from the sun are racing toward Earth's atmosphere at 2,000 miles per second.
Thursday is much better than Wednesday with highs in the low 50s or high 40s across much of the region.
Cloud cover will likely block our chance at viewing a partial solar eclipse in our region Saturday afternoon.
Tropical Storm Ophelia has been downgraded to a tropical depression.
California has only gotten one tropical storm, an unnamed storm that hit in 1939.
A Severe Thunderstorm Watch has been issued for several New Jersey and Pennsylvania counties until midnight.
Summer has been abnormally dry on the Hawaiian islands as wildfires broke out on the island of Maui.
The National Weather Service has issued a tornado watch effective until 11:00 p.m. in the Greater Philadelphia area this evening.
The Philadelphia region has had plenty of flash floods in recent months. But what are they ... and more importantly, how do you stay safe when they occur? CBS News Philadelphia meteorologist Tammie Souza goes in-depth for the answers.
Two tornado warnings and several flash flood warnings were issued Sunday morning and early afternoon, with more potential severe weather likely through the evening.