Government shutdown ends
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President Trump signed a bill reopening the government Wednesday night, but it will take more than a day for some things to return to business as usual. We're tracking those here.
The government is starting to reopen after President Trump signed a bill to fund the government through Jan. 30.
The longest federal government shutdown in history is now history, and agencies and services are starting to slowly come back to normal.
Open enrollment is well underway, and people who get their insurance through the Affordable Care Act have seen how much their costs will rise without the tax credits.
The longest government shutdown in U.S. history is officially over, but it could be a while before airports can fully recover.
As the government reopens, various timelines are in place for when affected areas such as SNAP and air travel return to normal.
The longest government shutdown in US history has ended, but it could take days — and in some cases a week or more — before normal operations resume.Payroll systems must be updated to pay out weeks of back wages.
Congress shouldn't get paid while American workers, like our men and women in uniform, do without," Rep. Dusty Johnson, R-South D
The government is back open after President Donald Trump signed the federal funding package after it passed in the House.