From weatherunderground:
After threatening the northern Leeward Islands hard-hit by Hurricane Irma, Hurricane Jose has moved off to the north of the islands, and is destined to spend the remainder of the week performing a slow clockwise loop several hundred miles north of Puerto Rico, far from any land areas. When Jose completes this loop late this week, it will be close to the eastern Bahamas, which are now in the 5-day cone of uncertainty for Jose.

Jose is under high wind shear of 20 - 30 knots, and this high shear has degraded the storm over the past two days. Jose was a high-end Category 4 storm with 155 mph winds on Saturday morning, but had weakened to a low-end Category 3 storm with 115 mph winds by 11 pm EDT Sunday. Moderate to high wind shear, combined with dry air, will likely continue to weaken Jose to Category 1 strength during the week, despite very warm sea surface temperatures (SSTs) near 29.5°C (85°F).

Long-range models suggest that a strong ridge of high pressure will build in to the north of Jose by Friday, forcing the hurricane to move west-northwest towards the U.S. East Coast. Once Jose approaches the U.S. this weekend, it may encounter some steering influence from the remnants of Hurricane Irma, which will still be over the Southeast U.S. If Irma’s remnants are cohesive enough, Jose would tend to move northward towards New England or Canada. Jose could also be influenced by stronger upper-level flow along the jet stream north of Irma’s remnants, but it’s too soon to tell exactly how the features within that flow will take shape over the eastern U.S. a week from now. It does appear we will be tracking this hurricane at least another ten days.

Florida clean up will start soon, down power lines and trees washed our roads, damaged or destroyed building to repair. You can add to that alligators to contend with that have been pushed or moved into areas they don't normally inhabit. Model tracks for Jose are all over the place. It is going to be a very interesting couple of weeks as the U.S., recovers from Harvey and Irma.