Ratcliffe also served as Scout Executive for the former Birmingham (AL) Area Council, circa late 1970s; that council merged with two other councils in the 1990s to form the Central Alabama Council.
As Chief Scout Executive
On February 1, 1993, Ratcliffe accepted the position of the Chief Scout Executive of the Boy Scouts of America (BSA). In March 1998, he met in Japan with leaders of the Boy Scouts of Japan to start an exchange program with the BSA.[4] While there, he presented Japanese Prime Minister Ryutaro Hashimoto with the BSA's Silver World Award. Ratcliffe said Scouting, "is one of the few programs that still focuses on values, and values seem to be a quality many of our young people lack today".[4]
In October 1998 he received the Order of the Arrow Distinguished Service Award.[5] The year before, in April 1997, Ratcliffe was arrested at Miami International Airport when the security scan showed he had inadvertently left a handgun in his luggage.[6]
During his tenure, Ratcliffe created the Nationally Coordinated Endowment Emphasis to increase the level of endowment giving to local councils.[7] He also created the James E. West Fellowship, the 1910 Society, and the Founders Circle to focus on endowments. These efforts effectively doubled local council endowments and allowed National to direct funds to major improvements in the high-adventure bases. Under Ratcliffe's administration, the Operation First Class program, now known as Scoutreach, was introduced to provide training and develop the resources necessary to serve at-risk youth in urban and rural areas.
Retirement and later years
Ratcliffe received a retirement benefit of $2.6 million when he retired in May 2000.[8] He received an honorary doctor of humane letters degree from Wittenberg in 2004.[9] Ratcliffe lived in Southlake, Texas, and served on the coordinating committees of the World Organization of the Scout Movement and the World Foundation. Ratcliffe died on August 21, 2015, at the age of 78.[1][10]