A new area of low pressure and a front are moving into Southeast Michigan on Wednesday, with storms expected to be strong to severe along and ahead of the front.The CBS Detroit NEXT Weather Team declared Wednesday a NEXT Weather Alert Day. Storms will move in through the day on Wednesday and will stick around into the night.Most of Southeast Michigan is rated 2 out of 5 on the severe risk scale by the Storm Prediction Center. Lenawee, Livingston, Monroe and Washtenaw counties are all rated at 3 out of 5 on the severe risk scale. The National Weather Service confirmed a tornado in Macomb County. The tornado is Michigan's 29th this year.Warnings and watches issued in Southeast MichiganA severe thunderstorm watch was issued for multiple counties until 10 p.m. Those counties are Lenawee, Lapeer, Livingston, Macomb, Monroe, Oakland, Sanilac, St. Clair, Washtenaw and Wayne. The warning has been liftedA thunderstorm warning was issued for Lenawee County until 7:45 p.m. The warning has been lifted.A thunderstorm warning was issued for Washtenaw and Livingston counties until 8 p.m. The warning has been lifted.A thunderstorm warning was issued for Monroe County until 8:30 p.m. The warning has been lifted.A thunderstorm warning was issued for Wayne County until 9 p.m. The warning has been lifted.Weather outlook ahead of JuneteenthSome lingering rain will be around on Thursday for Juneteenth. The main threats will be strong, damaging winds at 70 miles per hour or higher, as well as one-inch hail. We can't rule out the chance for a couple of storms to rotate. This could lead to a tornado or two through the evening hours on Wednesday. There will be lots of warm, humid air ahead of the system. Feels like temperatures will be in the mid-90s for Tuesday and Wednesday before the storms. The heat and humidity will act as fuel for storms ahead of a front. It will feel like the triple digits by the weekend with actual highs in the low 90s.