Storm system moving across the country with flooding threat

Severe storms could produce damaging winds and tornadoes.

Yesterday, up to a half a foot of rain fell in the Deep South flooding neighborhoods and even prompting water rescues around Birmingham, Alabama.

Damaging storms also moved through the South with reports of a possible tornado in Mississippi as well as damage reported to trees and a couple of homes.

This morning, snow and flood alerts stretch from Arizona to Kentucky.

Take a look how stretched out this frontal system is and several low pressures along it from the Southern Rockies to the Northeast.

Flooding and river flooding is the biggest threat this morning and into this afternoon across the South.

Heavy snow of up to a foot is expected in New Mexico with the tail end of this frontal system as the California storm moves east.

By Wednesday, as this system moves further east, a stronger storm will slowly move from the southern Rockies into the Mid-Mississippi Valley with heavy rain that could cause more flooding, a threat for damaging winds and a few tornadoes.

To the north, snow will develop from St. Louis to Chicago and into Cleveland with several inches possible.

By Wednesday night into Thursday, the storm moves into the East Coast with snow spreading into the Northeast and heavy rain and thunderstorms possible from Florida to Atlanta into the Carolinas.

Major cities along the I-95 corridor, in the Northeast, should see mostly rain Thursday but some areas in northern New Jersey, the Hudson Valley and near Boston could start as snow making for a slick commute Thursday morning.