It was after years of practising as an attorney that Alpheus Sipho Molope, senior manager of the legal services department at Sassa, felt a calling to join the civil service.
“Private practice gave me exposure to the nature and extent of litigation against and by the state,” says Molope. “I was motivated to join civil service after identifying the risk of litigation and the impact on the state.”
Civil service also appeals to Molope because of the opportunities on offer: “There is flexibility of intra-transfer from one department to another. One can change jobs without changing the employer, thus gaining extensive knowledge of the operations of the state.”
The range of legal proceedings Molope is exposed to through Sassa is broad, which appeals to his passion for learning. “I always have to be alert, conduct legal research and get to know new developments in the legal sphere,” he says. “Some of the matters I have to deal with are complex, and I do not think that I would have been exposed to the same kind of thing if I was in private practice.”
For Molope, it is a deep sense of patriotism and doing what is right, both for the state and its people, that drives much of his work: “I have the utmost desire to ensure that the state executes its mandate for the provisioning of services, which, in my case, is access to social assistance.
“If a legal dispute is in Sassa’s favour, then, as a taxpayer, I become imbued with the gratification that the fiscus of the country has been saved,” he says. “That is one of the things that inspires me to come to work in the morning.”
“I have the utmost desire to ensure that the state executes its mandate for the provisioning of services, which, in my case, is access to social assistance.”