Shutdown over: What it means now

The two-year budget deal resolves several big fiscal issues.

But after a roughly five-hour lapse in government funding early Friday morning, Congress did succeed in charting a course for less fiscal brinkmanship and more stability over the next two years.

The bipartisan budget deal resolves a lot of big outstanding issues:

-- It provides a long-awaited $90 billion infusion of federal disaster relief funds to help rebuild after the devastating wildfires and hurricanes of 2017.

-- It allocates more money for top bipartisan priorities: Opioid crisis response($6 billion); child care development block grants ($5.8 billion); veterans medical facilities ($4 billion); medical research ($2 billion); and, infrastructure programs ($20 billion).

The nation's debt limit was also increased until September 2019 as part of the agreement, removing the imminent risk of a credit default.

The government will also continue running through at least March 23 with funds appropriated in the deal through a so-called continuing resolution. Technically lawmakers will need to pass another measure next month to extend funding through 2018 and beyond, but leaders of both parties signaled that the big-picture sticking points around the budget had been resolved.

With President Trump's signing the package Friday morning, government services and operations will largely continue uninterrupted, and hundreds of thousands of federal workers will show up for work despite the overnight hiccup.

While lawmakers exhaled after the funding crisis and left town for a long weekend, budget hawks and immigration advocates sounded the alarms over their concerns of dire long-term impacts of the plan.