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Tuesday, 9 December 2014

ROAD CONSTRUCTION: building highways with intuition

David Modiri Mokoto
It is very rare to come across a story like that of DAVID MODIRI MOKOTO, but it is real that he is a self-taught road maker! It is also true that he has no formal qualifications to construct a highway, but while you need a driving permit to drive a licensed vehicle on the roads, he makes sure you drive peacefully and smoothly. Thembi Masser is left on the sideways by this amazing story of courage!

It all started in the April of 2010 when he arrived at the road construction company Stephanutti and Stocks. He arrived there to work randomly as a general worker whose aim was to make ends meet. But he surprised many with his work rate ans soon his supervisors elevated him to the position of team leader and in no time he was a supervisor as well.

“I was hungry for knowledge,” David, 29, says. It was competency and thirst for knowledge that drove him to his limits, to the edge of his skills. “We were doing general work like piping, building manholes for sewage and general road maintenance."

During that period he also completed a certificate in safety and health courses. This lead to his appointment as a rep in that field. “I taught myself how to do things,” he points out. “I wanted to know more, like how is the road constructed.” A year later he got his chance when he and his team built a road in Pomona, Kempton Park, near the iconic OR Tambo International Airport. “ I built that road without supervision,” he gloats. “Inspectors came in once or twice a week to give me thumbs up. Eventually after six weeks I handed a completed half a kilometer road over to the authorities.”   

Still, up to the present, he does not know which qualification he must go for in this field. “I have done no research into the whole study thing.” But he is eager to work for established companies like Group Five, Murray and Roberts, Moseme Construction and the company that gave him a life line, Stephanutti and Stocks. At the present he has started with Mapitsi Construction in Boksburg, Ekurhuleni. “You won’t believe it but my high school geography is what has carried me through so far. I am able to read drawings and inspect the soil. This helps me to use my common sense to complete my work.”

When he finished the Pomona road project he was promoted to a junior foreman. “Well, they did not give me a fat cheque to celebrate,” he shrugs his shoulders, “but my salary increased considerably.”

Since then he has help build countless roads in Ekurhruleni.

While at school he always wanted to be an electrical engineer. To pursue that dram he left his native Mahikeng in the North West to enroll at the Ekurhuleni East College in Brakpan to do N2. But he promptly dropped out of N3 because of financial constraints.

This lead him to the bottle store. He worked there as a cashier and as a stock controller for six months until he went over to Fraser Alexandra Tailings. “I worked as a pressure pump operator there,” he explains. They pumped slurry from the deep of the earth into earth mounds. “I was trained in-house. I did not have the qualifications to perform the job.” He was at Fraser Alexandra for two and half years.

He did his primary schooling at Naletsana in Bodibe, North West. Then it was off to Mphethuto, a middle institution school, before completing at Baitshoko in Itsoseng. His favourite subjects were geography and biology. He also did maths, Afrikaans, English and Setswana. “I had a crush on one of the teachers but my favourite teacher was Ms Ramaoka. I wonder where she is today.”

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