The government shutdown is over, as President Donald Trump on Friday announced his support for a plan to reopen the government temporarily.
But the 35-day shutdown, the longest on record, will have lingering effects. Here are five ways the shutdown will continue to impact Americans and the US government:
Many beneficiaries of the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, formerly known as food stamps, will run out of their food assistance money earlier in February thanks to the shutdown.
Because the US Department of Agriculture did not receive funding during the shutdown, the department was forced to disburse February SNAP benefits weeks in advance, meaning an estimated 15 million households could run out of assistance money before the end of the month.
National parks across the country suffered vandalism and increased contamination during the shutdown.
Most notably, people cut down some of the namesake trees at Joshua Tree National Park to carve new paths in parts of the park that were previously inaccessible to the public.
Because of the shutdown, there weren't enough staff members around to stop vandals from tearing down the trees.
According to a report by the Transactional Records Access Clearing House, at least 40,000 immigration court hearings were delayed due to the shutdown, adding to already-long backlogs that have often stalled immigration cases across the country.