The identical storm system that brought tornadoes to parts of the central Gulf Coast on Saturday will proceed to slowly move to the east through not less than Tuesday.
There have been not less than nine reports of tornadoes Saturday evening in what the FOX Forecast Center is looking a regional tornado outbreak across southern Alabama and Mississippi.
Not less than five of those reports were inside the Mobile, Alabama, metro area.
The FOX Forecast Center says the regional tornado outbreak was sparked by an unusually high amount of wind shear that combined with moisture from the Gulf of Mexico.
The National Weather Service is now sending teams to survey the damage to find out what number of tornadoes touched down within the region on Saturday.
Those results are expected Sunday or Monday.
Hundreds of thousands of Americans from the Ohio Valley to the Southeast will wake as much as showers and widespread rain, though no severe weather is predicted.
The weather on Halloween won’t be a washout by any means, however the morning commute could also be impacted.
By Monday night, the rain will shift east into the East Coast, including the I-95 corridor.
The FOX Forecast Center says some bands of heavier rain are possible, and as much as 1 inch of rain is feasible east of the Appalachian Mountains from Virginia into South Carolina.
The rain will stick around on Tuesday along the East Coast from North Carolina to Maine before the storm system weakens and move offshore.