America Makes honors collaborator, ambassadors
America Makes, the National Additive Manufacturing Innovation Institute, announced Adele Ratcliff as its 2025 Distinguished Collaborator Award winner at the organization’s annual Members Meeting and Exchange event held Tuesday and Wednesday in Canfield.
Ratcliff is the retired director of the Innovation Capability and Modernization Office in Washington, D.C.
Established in 2014, recipients of this award are celebrated for cultivating collaborative relationships with academia, government and industry. Over the course of her career, Ratcliff, who recently announced her retirement after nearly 30 years of service, has been a key driver in significantly boosting the agility and readiness of the U.S. Defense Industrial Base to respond to national security challenges.
“While additive manufacturing has become ubiquitous, we still face the challenge of qualifying parts at pace; the adversaries do not pause their efforts, neither can we,” Ratcliff said. “We must think strategically, how to enable manufacturing in austere environments with unstable infrastructure while maintaining quality and reliability for critical national defense applications.
“As I transition from government service, I carry the lessons and connections forged here forward, confident in the rising tide of disruptors and young innovators eager to push the boundaries of what’s possible.”
Also recognized were the Ambassador Award Program recipients. Launched in 2017, the program recognizes individuals who demonstrate exceptional commitment to advancing America Makes and its mission.
The 2025 class embodies a cross-section of the industry whose efforts have significantly shaped additive technology and showcase the strength of the AM community. They also symbolize the progress achieved in AM technology, industrial base expansion, and workforce development.
Selected were David Beck, former branch chief, Space Industrial Base & Supply Chain, U.S. Space Force; Stacey Eeman, director, Industry Strategy, SME; Thomas Pomorski, director of additive manufacturing, Ursa Major; Mark Shaw, chief engineer, National Institute for Aviation Research; Samantha Snabes, co-founder and catalyst, re:3D; Andrew Thompson, manager and deputy chief engineer of additive manufacturing, Northrop Grumman; and Rich Wetzel, president, The Lanterman Group.
“We are honored to have a passionate and powerful membership base that proactively leads efforts across their industries and beyond that boosts our efforts as an Institute,” said John Wilczynski, executive director of America Makes.
“Today, we sit at a critical juncture within America Makes. By reinforcing and expanding our effective collaboration model, the dedicated efforts of our supporters are essential to strengthening the U.S. industrial base and igniting the next wave of technological breakthroughs in additive manufacturing.”