Erin Kelly

USA TODAY

WASHINGTON — Congress will vote this week on a bipartisan bill that provides more than $1 trillion to fund the federal government through September and averts a shutdown at the end of this week.

The compromise, reached late Sunday and unveiled Monday, keeps spending within limits previously set by Congress with a twist — lawmakers increased a spending account set aside for combat operations that doesn't count against those limits. The bill would boost defense spending by $25 billion for the full 2017 fiscal year.

The House is expected to vote as early as Wednesday, with the Senate following quickly. Here's a look at the highlights of what is, and isn't, in the bill.

The bill includes:

• $15 billion of a $30 billion request from President Trump for extra funding for defense programs and combat operations in Afghanistan, Iraq and Syria. A small chunk of that money, $2.5 billion, could not be used by the Trump administration until it sends Congress a plan for how to defeat the Islamic State.

• $1.5 billion in additional funding for border security, which was part of a $3 billion request from Trump. It would help pay for high-tech surveillance, such as drones and sensors.

• Nearly $296 million to plug an emergency budget shortfall in Puerto Rico so that the U.S. territory will not run out of Medicaid funding this year. Puerto Rico receives far less Medicaid reimbursement money than states, and officials have estimated that nearly half a million residents would lose medical coverage by December without help from Congress.

• More than $1 billion for a permanent extension of health insurance benefits for retired union mine workers and their families. This provision had bipartisan support from senators who represent coal states such as Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia.

• $8.1 billion in disaster relief for states hit hard by floods, wildfires and other disasters in 2015 and 2016, including California, Louisiana, North Carolina and West Virginia.

• $2 billion in additional funding for medical research at the National Institutes of Health. The money would help pay for research into Alzheimer's disease, antibiotic resistance and cures for cancer.

• Year-round Pell grants to provide 1 million college students with an additional average award of $1,650 to help pay for tuition. The grants are awarded to students based on financial need.

• $990 million in additional humanitarian aid to boost global famine-relief efforts. That includes $300 million for Food for Peace in South Sudan, Somalia, Yemen and Nigeria.

• $68 million to reimburse New York and Florida law enforcement agencies for the costs of helping the Secret Service protect Trump and his family when they are at Trump Tower in New York City or at the Mar-a-Lago estate in Florida.

• $407 million in additional funds to fight wildfires. This provision was sought by Western lawmakers whose states have suffered the most from huge, raging blazes.

• $100 million more to reduce opioid addiction. There is also more than $130 million in additional funds for the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration and $30 million more for grants to help states fund mental health programs for low-income residents.

• A provision by California lawmakers to prevent the Department of Justice from spending any money to interfere with state medical marijuana laws. Without protection from Congress, supporters of the state laws fear that the medical marijuana industry could be subject to federal raids.

The bill does NOT include:

• Trump's request for $1.4 billion to begin construction of a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border. Democrats said they would oppose any government funding bill that included money for the barrier, which they and some border-state Republicans fiercely oppose. Trump has vowed to fight for the money in the 2018 spending bills.

• Trump's request to cut non-defense spending by $18 billion. Lawmakers largely ignored the president's call for deep cuts in domestic programs for the remainder of fiscal 2017.

• Defunding Planned Parenthood. The Trump administration has sought to end all federal funding for the group because it performs abortions (although not with federal funds). Democrats said they would oppose any attempt to strip the group's funding.

• Extra funding to hire more Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. Democrats said Trump wants to hire more ICE agents to create a "deportation force" to go after undocumented immigrants who have not committed any serious crimes.

• Restricting "sanctuary cities" from receiving federal grants. These cities protect some undocumented immigrants from deportation, and Trump wants them to be stripped of grant money unless they cooperate with federal immigration authorities.

• Any provisions that would have undermined the Affordable Care Act, better known as Obamacare. The president had threatened to stop paying federal subsidies to insurance companies that offer lower-cost medical coverage to low-income Americans. The White House relented when Democrats said that failing to make the payments would doom a government funding deal.

• Dismantling consumer protections created by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of 2010. Republicans have introduced a separate bill to overhaul the law, which they say has hurt consumers in part by failing to stop increases in bank fees. Democrats fought to keep any rollback of the law out of the must-pass spending bill.

• Deep cuts to the Environmental Protection Agency, which enforces clean air and water laws. Despite calls by the Trump administration to cut the agency's budget by nearly a third, the bill cuts only about 1% of the EPA's funding.

Read more:

Negotiators reach agreement to fund government, avoid shutdown

Congress passes short-term funding bill to avoid government shutdown

Government shutdown less likely now that Trump has relented on border wall