Sat Jun 15 08:34:58 EDT 2024 Lake Okeechobee-Biscayne Bay- Coastal waters from Jupiter Inlet to Deerfield Beach FL out 20 NM- Coastal waters from Deerfield Beach to Ocean Reef FL out 20 NM- Waters from Jupiter Inlet to Deerfield Beach FL from 20 to 60 NM- Waters from Deerfield Beach to Ocean Reef FL from 20 to 60 NM excluding the territorial waters of Bahamas-Glades-Hendry- Inland Palm Beach County-Metro Palm Beach County- Coastal Collier County-Inland Collier County-Inland Broward County- Metro Broward County-Inland Miami-Dade County- Metropolitan Miami Dade-Mainland Monroe-Coastal Palm Beach County- Coastal Broward County-Coastal Miami Dade County-Far South Miami- Dade County- Coastal waters from Chokoloskee to Bonita Beach FL out 20 NM- Coastal waters from East Cape Sable to Chokoloskee FL out 20 NM- Waters from Chokoloskee to Bonita Beach FL from 20 to 60 NM- 834 AM EDT Sat Jun 15 2024 ...Showers and Thunderstorms Likely Again This Afternoon... ...Additional Flooding Could Develop Today... This Hazardous Weather Outlook is for Atlantic coastal waters, southeast Florida, southern Florida, southwest Florida and Gulf of Mexico. .DAY ONE...Today and tonight. Excessive Rainfall: With most of the region already saturated from the heavy rains this week, additional rainfall this afternoon can quickly lead to localized flooding especially across the east coast metro. Thunderstorms: Scattered thunderstorms will be possible once again today. The strongest thunderstorms could contain heavy downpours and gusty winds. .DAYS TWO THROUGH SEVEN...Sunday through Friday. Scattered showers and thunderstorms will be possible through the rest of the weekend and into next week. The strongest thunderstorms could contain gusty winds and heavy downpours. Any heavy downpours could create the potential for additional flooding concerns. The risk of rip currents will gradually increase for the early to middle portion of the week across the Atlantic Coast beaches as onshore flow strengthens. .SPOTTER INFORMATION STATEMENT... Weather spotters are encouraged to report high wind, hail, and flooding to the National Weather Service forecast office in Miami.