Despite billions behind in unpaid bills, Governor Rauner announces new $11 billion infrastructure plan

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SPRINGFIELD – If Illinois is having financial difficulties, they’re evidently no big deal.  Governor Rauner called Tuesday for a six year, $11 billion dollar infrastructure plan that will be paid for with tax dollars … somehow. With the state billions of dollars behind on bill paying, where the money is going to come from for this starry-eyed plan will be intriguing. From the governor’s office:

Gov. Bruce Rauner announced a plan today to invest $11.05 billion in the state’s roads and bridges over the next six years, including $2.2 billion of state and federal funding in the upcoming fiscal year. The Illinois Department of Transportation Multi-Year Proposed Highway Improvement Program will focus on projects that provide the greatest economic benefit to communities and take advantage of long-term strategies that save money over time.

“Investing in transportation creates jobs and economic opportunity, improves safety and makes Illinois a better place to raise a family,” Rauner said. “This plan will make Illinois more competitive while protecting the interests of the taxpayers.”

The governor announced the plan’s release at Peoria’s McClugage Bridge at eastbound U.S. 150, which will be replaced in 2019 at a cost of $205 million with the completion of the final design this year. Based on current funding levels, the FY2019-2024 Proposed Highway Improvement Program aims to improve a total of 1,945 miles of miles of road and 525 bridges maintained by the state. The multi-year program also includes funding for upgrades to more than 750 miles of local roads and 922,933 square feet of local bridges.

Other plan highlights include:

  • $26 million toward the reconstruction of U.S. 20/Rockford Bypass in Rockford
  • $36 million to replace and repair the Third Street exit and ramps to Martin Luther King Drive in East St. Louis
  • $12.7 million for additional lanes on 4.5 miles of Interstate 57 from Johnson City to West Frankfort
  • $148.4 million for bridge work and other improvements on Interstate 80 through Will County

This multiyear plan is the Illinois Department of Transportation’s (IDOT) first to embrace asset management strategies that commit to smaller repairs avoiding the higher costs of deferred maintenance. Using this approach, IDOT will realize savings over multiple years to eventually invest in other projects throughout the state. The plan also builds upon the latest in data-driven tools to help identify projects that provide the most value to the public while improving quality of life and regional mobility.

“At the governor’s direction, IDOT continues to innovate in how it chooses which projects to build,” said Illinois Transportation Secretary Randy Blankenhorn. “This is a plan that gets the state on the right track toward truly meeting the needs of our communities and building a 21st century system of transportation.”

A Thought for Today

PROPER MOTIVES 

READ 2 CHRONICLES 1:1 THROUGH 2:18; JOHN 6:41-59 

The 1960s television comedy I Dream of Jeannie was about the life of an astronaut who uncorked a bottle and was granted a lifetime of wishes. Have you ever wondered what you would wish for if a powerful being promised to give you whatever you wanted? 

King Solomon was offered anything he wanted from God. His request revealed a great deal about his heart. 

“Give me wisdom and knowledge, that I may lead this people, for who is able to govern this great people of yours?” (2 Chronicles 1:10).

Solomon’s desire was to help others and to serve God. When God realized that Solomon wanted to serve His people, God blessed Solomon with wisdom and more. 

What was the first thought that came to your mind when considering your greatest desire? Like Solomon, it reveals what really motivates you. If you have a heart to love God and serve others, God will provide everything you need.

Thought for Today: It is vital to remember that God alone can meet your needs. 

FCN Daily Bible Verse

Do everything without complaining or arguing, so that you may become blameless and pure, children of God without fault in a crooked and depraved generation, in which you shine like stars in the universe as you hold out the word of life — in order that I may boast on the day of Christ that I did not run or labor for nothing.
Philippians 2:14-16 (Read all of Philippians 2:14-16)
New International Version

Pastor Rick Warren: God’s Free Gift of Salvation Is Offered to Everyone

“God says he will accept and acquit us — declare us ‘not guilty’ — if we trust Jesus Christ to take away our sins. And we all can be saved in this same way, by coming to Christ, no matter who we are or what we have been like” (Romans 3:22 TLB).

There are more than 7,000 promises in the Bible from God to you. They’re like blank checks just waiting on you to cash. And with every promise, there’s a premise.

In the Bible’s most famous promise, John 3:16, Jesus tells us, “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life” (NKJV). God promises we won’t perish if we believe in him.

God’s free gift of salvation is offered to everyone. It doesn’t matter your religion or cultural background. Jesus Christ died for you.

How do we receive this free gift?

The Bible says, “God says he will accept and acquit us — declare us ‘not guilty’ — if we trust Jesus Christ to take away our sins. And we all can be saved in this same way, by coming to Christ, no matter who we are or what we have been like” (Romans 3:22 TLB).

Though anyone can acknowledge the existence of Jesus, the only way we can get to heaven is by placing our trust in him. You can’t trust Jesus unless you really know him.

It’s the difference between your head and your heart. Here’s an example to help explain that difference. I have the privilege of knowing many people, including some famous people. I know Bill Gates. We’ve spoken on the same platform together. I’ve sat on a couch and explained The PEACE Plan to him. I know Bill Gates, but I don’t really know him. He’s not a close personal friend, and I can’t say I really know what makes him tick.

But I do know my wife. We’ve been married for over 40 years. I know what makes her tick. I know the way she thinks. I know what she cares about.

When we talk about knowing God, it means having a real, living relationship with him. That’s what it means to trust God.

Talk It Over

  • How is it possible to know about God but not really know him?
  • How are you getting to really know God? What does that look like in your life?
  • If someone is trusting Jesus, what might their life look like?

Give hope, prayer, and encouragement below. Post a comment & talk about it.

FCN Daily Bible Verse

Faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see. … By faith we understand that the universe was formed at God’s command, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible.
Hebrews 11:1,3 (Read all of Hebrews 11:1,3)
New International Version

Walter V. Wendler: Reflections on Higher Education

How I Spent My Summer Vacation

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Graduates – In a few months, millions of people like you, full of hope and anticipation, will transition from high school to college. Privilege may have provided engaged deliberative parenting and quality primary and secondary educational opportunities, and you may have personality characteristics that mark you for a successful college career. However — and I don’t like being the bearer of bad news — half of those who start college aren’t so fortunate. I suggest a positive action focus for the summer: Call it a counselor’s preemptive strike toward correction, redemption, or reinforcement.

“Be Prepared.”

Boy Scout Motto

Memorial Day is not here, but it’s time to think about Labor Day.  If, on your first day of college, you are asked to write an expose entitled, “How I Spent My Summer Vacation,” here are some ideas about what you can do and subsequently include in your initial epistle.

Read Regularly — You probably spend a great deal of time hooked-up to your Smartphone.  Don’t be fooled, they’re not really that smart.  Don’t include in your summer rumination what Joseph Epstein quipped in a Weekly Standard piece, “The Reluctant Bibliophile,” about someone reading War and Peace on his Smartphone.  If you read great literature on your Smartphone, don’t lie, just downplay it.  Regardless, your reflection should include commentary on serious reading — something other than punctuation-less tweets, Instagrams, Pinterest, StumbleUpon, Tumblr, and Facebook posts, pokes and pontifications.  Read at least an hour a day. If you can’t find the time to do that over the summer, don’t start college in the fall.  Look on the bright side:  You ain’t gonna’ hav’ to write no stinkin’ paper.

Work Diligently – Get a job, a real one. Break a sweat. Come home too tired at night to do much of anything other than rest and, of course, read a little bit. This is excellent preparation for the time ahead at the university.  Self-discipline will make college a more successful investment.  Work engenders effectiveness. The College Board says, “Working teaches students about responsibility and can also reinforce what they are learning in school.”  And, contrary to what some freshmen want their parents to believe, working 12 to 15 hours a week while a full-time student actually improves academic performance, rather than hampers it. Oh, and while working this summer, watch the boss when she looks for someone to do something extra — it’s always the busiest person, never the person standing around with hands in pockets or leaning on a rake.   “When you need a job done, find the busiest person you can and ask them to do it,” is an old adage precisely because it’s the truth. Engaged people accomplish.

Save, don’t Spend – Be able to report that you learned to pinch pennies. Instead of going out to eat with friends, stay home and cook a hot dog, or a turkey dog if you’re bent in that direction. Record in your magnum opus that you learned the value of frugality. An old Yiddish Proverb says, “A full purse is not as good as an empty one is bad.”  College debt has crossed the $1.5 trillion mark, and 35% of the students who graduate carry significant back-breaking, life-limiting budgetary burdens.  A nod towards parsimony could be valuable and an indicator of wisdom and maturity.  You may not get an “A” but the faculty member who grades your paper will do so with admiration or envy — hopefully the former.

Serve Seriously – Commit yourself to meaningful activity beyond your paycheck.  When recounting your summer, declare honestly that you dedicated time and energy to something that would give you appreciation of and responsiveness to others in pursuit of your studies and aspirations.  The job I mentioned above would be an excellent start, but don’t stop there.  Volunteer at a hospital, undertake ministry at a place of worship — anything that evidences care for something larger than self.  H.W. Longfellow observed, “The life of a man consists not in seeing visions and in dreaming dreams, but in active charity and in willing service.”  Such thinking and action could round out your retelling of your respite’s romp.

Focus and Finish – During your “vacation” — not sure what you are “vacating” from — in all undertakings commit to completion.  Less than 40% of college freshmen graduate in four years according to the US Department of Education. A 2010 Minding the Campus post by Richard Vedder, “What Happens When College Is Oversold,” claims that the average student spends less than 30 hours per week on academics.   All of us at some point remember how to start something but cannot figure out how to finish it. Check your attic.  Check mine. Become a finisher. It can be War and Peace, work, reflection, fiscal responsibility, social purpose or “all of the above.” My counsel to you:  Whatever you start this summer, be sure that you are able to honestly testify to having finished it.

BTW I can barely use my Smartphone, but I know, @TEOTD (“at the end of the day” for the uninitiated) this stuff is right:  I see its presence, or absence, daily.

A retake on a piece posted May 2014, but more true now than then

Pastor Rick Warren: God’s Great Gift

God’s Great Gift

“Out of sheer generosity God put us in right standing with Himself. A pure gift. He got us out of the mess we’re in and restored us to where He always wanted us to be. And He did it by means of Jesus Christ. He sacrificed Jesus on the altar of the world to clear that world of sin” (Romans 3:24–25 The Message).

The greatest gift you’ve ever been given wasn’t bought in a store. No cash exchanged hands. It wasn’t even wrapped. Yet it cost the Giver everything.
The Bible says God sent his Son to earth to give you the greatest gift ever. He came to Earth to die and make you right with God. Romans 3:24–25 says, “Out of sheer generosity God put us in right standing with himself. A pure gift. He got us out of the mess we’re in and restored us to where he always wanted us to be. And he did it by means of Jesus Christ. God sacrificed Jesus on the altar of the world to clear that world of sin” (The Message).

So why did Jesus have to die? Let’s go back to the basics.

  • Nobody’s perfect. I’ve never met a single person who has claimed to be perfect. I don’t measure up to my own expectations, much less God’s perfect standard. Neither do you. We’ve all blown it. The Bible says, “All of us have sinned and fallen short of God’s glory” (Romans 3:23 CEV).
  • God is just. God wants to be fair. When somebody breaks a law, there must be a penalty for it. When you break man’s laws, you pay man’s penalty. When you break God’s laws, you pay God’s penalties. The Bible says, “The payment for sin is death” (Romans 6:23 CEV).
  • Jesus paid the price for our sin. The Bible says, “God took the sinless Christ and poured into Him our sins. Then, in exchange, he poured God’s goodness into us” (2 Corinthians 5:21 TLB). Jesus took on my sin and your sin and all the sin that has ever been committed. That’s the good news, the Gospel. Jesus paid the price you could never pay.
  • Accept God’s free gift. God gave us a free gift of salvation when Jesus took our sin upon himself. It’s a gift we must receive. The Bible says, “Yet to all who did receive him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God” (John 1:12 NIV).

Will you accept God’s free gift of salvation? It’s one thing to understand the basics of how to have a relationship with Jesus. It’s another to accept the gift.

I pray you will make that all-important decision today.

If you are ready to commit your life to Jesus Christ, then pray this prayer:

“Dear Jesus, you have promised that if I believe in you, everything I’ve ever done wrong will be forgiven, I will learn the purpose of my life, and you will accept me into your eternal home in heaven one day.

I confess my sin, and I believe that you are God, my Savior. I receive you into my life as my Lord. Today I’m turning over every part of my life to your management. You have the right to call the shots in my life.

Jesus, I want to receive the great gift of your love. Thank you that I don’t have to earn it or deserve it or work for it. I want to use the rest of my life to serve you rather than serving myself. I humbly commit my life to you and ask you to save me and accept me into your family. In Jesus’ name I pray. Amen.”

Talk It Over

  • Outside of your salvation, what’s the most memorable gift you’ve ever received?
  • Why is it hard to accept a free, extravagant gift?
  • Who can you tell this week about God’s free gift of salvation?

Give hope, prayer, and encouragement below. Post a comment & talk about it.

FCN Daily Bible Verse

My soul thirsts for God, for the living God. When can I go and meet with God?
Psalm 42:2 (Read all of Psalm 42:2)
New International

Pastor Rick Warren: Don’t Give Up: Refuse to be Bitter

Don’t Give Up: Refuse to Be Bitter

“I came naked from my mother’s womb,’ [Job] said, ‘and I shall have nothing when I die. The Lord gave me everything I had, and they were his to take away. Blessed be the name of the Lord.’ In all of this Job did not sin or revile God” (Job 1:21-22 TLB).

Grief is a part of life, but you can’t let a season of grief turn into a lifestyle of grief.

At some point you have to let it go!

There is a difference between mourning and moaning, between weeping and wallowing. A loss can deepen me, but that doesn’t mean it can define me. A loss is a part of my maturity but not my identity.

God gives you grace to get through what you’re going through. Other people may not have that same measure of grace, so they might give you bad advice!

“[Job’s] wife said to him, ‘Are you still trying to maintain your integrity? Curse God and die.’ But Job replied, ‘You talk like a godless woman. Should we accept only good things from the hand of God and never anything bad?’ So in all this, Job said nothing wrong” (Job 2:9-10 NLT).

Job refused to become bitter and resentful. Bitterness prolongs pain. It doesn’t relieve it; it only reinforces it. “Watch out that no bitterness takes root among you . . . it causes deep trouble, hurting many in their spiritual lives” (Hebrews 12:15 TLB).

Job gives three steps in refocusing:

1. Put your heart right. That means you forgive. “But I can’t forgive!” you say. That’s why you need Christ in your life; he’ll give you the power to forgive.

2. Reach out to God. Ask him to come into your heart and heal those wounds and help you and give you strength and power for tomorrow, next week, next month.

3. Face the world again, firm and courageous. Many people, when they’re hurt, withdraw into a shell. They say, “I’ll never let anybody hurt me again!” They retire from life. Job says to do the exact opposite: Resume your life; don’t retire from it. Get back out there in the world.

There’s a happy ending to Job’s life. “The Lord blessed the last part of Job’s life even more than he had blessed the first” (Job 42:12 GNT). Job went through all this hurt, but in spite of that, God blessed the last part of Job’s life even more than the first.

Wouldn’t you like the same in your life? Say, “God, I don’t care whether I have five years or 50 years left. Would you bless the last part of my life more than the first part?”

The lesson of Job’s life is this: It doesn’t matter who’s hurt you or how long you’ve been hurt or how deeply you’ve been hurt. God can make the rest of your life the best of your life if you’re willing to forgive and let go of resentment and release the offender.

Talk About It

Talk It Over

  • In grief, why is it easier to draw into ourselves rather than be with people who will help us move forward?
  • How have you experienced or observed the debilitating effects of bitterness?
  • What do you want God to help you accomplish in the rest of your life? What do you need to let go of so that he can work fully in and through you?

Give hope, prayer, and encouragement below. Post a comment & talk about it.

Weekly Devotion: Roger Lipe, Fellowship of Christian Athletes

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