What This Award Represents—and Why Biosafety Matters
April 10, 2026
By: Kerstin Haskell, MBA.
President, World BioHazTec.
I remember exactly where I was when I got the call.
I was sitting in an airport, waiting for my flight home from Iceland after attending a conference in Germany. I was exhausted, jet-lagged, and only half paying attention to my phone when it rang.
“Check your email!” said Carol Traum, our Executive Vice President.
“Congratulations!” said Ted Traum, our Principal.
“What are you talking about?” I asked. I was tired.
“The award! You got it!”
“Wait,” I said, suddenly more awake. “I’m going to meet the Governor?”
That was the moment I learned I had been selected to receive the World Trade Center Institute Maryland International Business Leadership Award.
It Started with a Conversation, Not a Campaign
Like most meaningful recognition, this did not begin with a campaign or an application package.
It started with a phone call from Brian Castleberry at the Maryland Department of Commerce—an exceptional partner who had helped bring Biosafety Day to Maryland the year before. He asked a few straightforward questions about our exports that year.
“I’m putting you in for an award,” he said.
“Oh, okay,” I replied, and rattled off some numbers.
At the time, it didn’t feel momentous. In hindsight, it was one of those quiet inflection points that leadership careers are built on.
Showing Up as a Team
When the interview invitation arrived, the timing could not have been better. Dan Yoong, World BioHazTec’s Managing Director for Asia, the Middle East, and Africa, was already in the U.S. preparing for the ABSA International Conference. There was no question—Dan needed to be part of that interview.
If we were being asked to speak about global impact, public health, and international collaboration, then he was a living example of that work.
His wife joined us as well, as we were driving straight from the interview in Baltimore to Raleigh, North Carolina, for the conference.
I will never forget that room—nearly fifteen people gathered around a conference table, introducing themselves. When it was Dan’s wife’s turn, she smiled and said, “I’m the boss of him,” pointing directly at Dan.
The room immediately burst into laughter. Any nervousness disappeared.
From there, we spoke openly and proudly about biosafety, engineering, partnership, and what it takes to build a company that crosses borders while remaining deeply rooted in Maryland.
A Night That Felt Bigger Than One Person
The awards ceremony at the M&T Bank Exchange was unforgettable. The room glowed with dramatic purple and blue hues, and for a moment, everything felt quietly surreal.
Sitting to my left was my mentor, RADM Deborah Wilson, PhD, CBSP, RBP (ret.), with her husband, Tom, by her side. On my right was my husband, Jake. At our table were my parents, Ted and Carol Traum, long-time leaders and partners in World BioHazTec, alongside COO Juan Osorio and his wife Nathalie, and Lia Vizzotti, CEO of World BioHazTec Latin America.
As I looked around the room, what struck me most was the scale. There were nearly 400 people in attendance—leaders from business, government, academia, and industry. Many of them had likely never heard the word biosafety before that evening. And yet, the work represented in that room—and far beyond it—depends on it.
That realization stayed with me. Biosafety should not be a niche term known only to scientists and engineers. It should be recognized and embraced by C-suite executives, policymakers, investors, and institutional leaders as a foundational element of responsible innovation, public health preparedness, and economic resilience. If biosafety is invisible, it is vulnerable. If it is understood, it becomes integrated into decision-making at the highest levels.
That sense of responsibility made the night feel larger than any single recognition.
The People Who Brought Us Here
That feeling deepened as women approached me throughout the evening—congratulating me, thanking me, and noting that I was the only woman among the six award recipients that year. Each time, I proudly introduced them to RADM Wilson and shared just how instrumental she has been in bringing so many of us together.
From Ted’s early brainstorming sessions with RADM Wilson, to Juan Osorio—whom we met through colleagues in RADM Wilson’s orbit who recognized both his talent and the growing need for leadership in biocontainment engineering—to Lia Vizzotti, whom we met during a WHO-supported training session RADM Wilson helped organize, the throughline was RADM Wilson.
She had an extraordinary ability to see what was needed and to connect people at exactly the right moment.
We never forget that.
Seeing Our Story on the Screen
I will admit, I was nervous when the program began introducing each honoree and playing short videos about their work. I didn’t know what to expect when World BioHazTec appeared on the screen.
You can watch the video here.
What I saw was emotional, grounded, and deeply reflective of what our team has built over decades. When the video ended and I stood, the applause was immense—and humbling.
A Conversation with the Governor
When I met Governor Wes Moore, I thanked him for issuing Maryland’s Biosafety Day Proclamation—and, admittedly, asked whether we might be able to have another one.
I asked him to connect me with his team so we could talk more about biosafety, its economic impact, and why Maryland is uniquely positioned as a global hub for high- and maximum-containment laboratories. We are a dense, interconnected community doing work that matters far beyond our borders.
He was gracious, engaged, and genuinely curious.
After confirming it was allowed, my husband stepped up to the stage. As we stood with Governor Wes Moore, he handed his phone to a woman nearby and asked, “Would you mind taking our picture?” I quickly interjected, “Jake, she is probably the CEO of some big company.” She laughed and replied, “Actually, I am the CEO of BWI Airport,” and graciously took our photo with the Governor.
What This Award Represents
This award is an honor—but more importantly, it is a responsibility.
It reflects the collective work of World BioHazTec’s global team, the mentors who shaped us, the partners who trusted us, and Maryland’s leadership in biosafety and public health. The work continues, and we are proud to carry it forward—together.
My hope is that leaders across industry, government, and policy will engage with biosafety not as a compliance obligation, but as a strategic responsibility that protects people, strengthens innovation, and safeguards our collective future.
