News

National Hurricane Center watches a potential disturbance off coast that could bring more rain to northern Gulf Coast.
A storm system spinning off the southeastern U.S. coastline has caught the attention of the National Hurricane Center (NHC) with a small chance of developing into a tropical system.
According to the NHC, the disturbance is identifiable as a tropical wave carrying clusters of disorganized showers and thunderstorms in the open Atlantic.
Scattered showers and storms will move across parts of South Florida with the potential for some heavy downpours and ...
A tropical system with a low chance of formation is set to cross Florida, dumping rain across the state — again. The National Hurricane Center is tracking a disturbance near the southeast coast with a ...
Lawmakers from both parties have so far rejected steep cuts to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) ...
While environmental conditions were marginally conducive for some development, forecasters said development would be slow and ...
A tropical wave moving across the Atlantic Ocean has no chance of further development as environmental conditions became more ...
Long-range computer models continue to show a short and unremarkable lifespan for the system, which would be named Dexter if it managed to make it to tropical storm status.
Saharan dust may be chipping away at the current tropical system, but experts say it usually winds down before August.
Daily Miami and Fort Lauderdale summer weather forecasts usually can be summed up as “hot, rain, chewy humid, repeat.” Sunday’s forecast drops one of those.