b'A LIFETIME IN THE MAKING: THE LASTING LEGACY OF JAY KORTEJay Korte has
spent a lifetime learning how things workBy the time he graduated in 1990,
Jay didnt need anHE LAUGHSand how people work together. From a young age,
heintroduction. Hed already lived the business from understood
responsibility, accountability and the valuethe field to the office. Over
the years, he became of showing up. Those principles shaped his career at
TheThe Korte Companys ultimate utility player ABOUT IT Korte Company,
where he served in many roles beforemoving between project engineering,
estimating, becoming director of client relations. As he prepares
tosuperintending, project management and leadership retire, the impact of
that steady leadership is alreadyroles. That broad view gave him empathy
andNOW, CALLING firmly in place. foresight. He understood how one decision
rippled across a job site, a schedule and a team.Jay grew up east of
Pierron, Illinois, the youngest of four brothers in a rural household
where work cameWhat Jay loved most was the people. He broughtHIMSELF THE
first. Summers meant chores, construction sites andteams together, built
trust with clients and carried early mornings. His father, Larry, was
employee numberThe Korte Companys sense of stewardship into three at The
Korte Company, and Jay followed him intothe community. Through years of
service with the company as a teenager, opening the warehouse
andLeadership Council Southwestern Illinois, UnitedCOMPANYS getting coffee
ready before most kids were awake. FromWay and regional military support
efforts, he helped Uncle Ralph, he learned an enduring lesson:
masterstrengthen the place The Korte Company calls home. the technical
side first. Jay carried that advice to theNow, as he steps into retirement
with his wife, Renae,JOS OQUENDO.University of Illinois, where he studied
civil engineeringJay leaves behind more than completed projects. and
construction management while continuing to workHis legacy lives on in the
people he guided, the on company projects. relationships he built and the
standard he set.4 5'