Tuesday, February 4, 2020

Cooper Names New Secretaries for Departments of Transportation, Information Technology

NCDIT's chief deputy state chief information officer and chief services officer, Tracy Doaks, will replace Secretary Eric Boyette.
RALEIGH
Feb 4, 2020

Gov. Roy Cooper has named Eric Boyette to serve as the next secretary of the North Carolina Department of Transportation.

Boyette, who currently serves as the secretary of the N.C. Department of Information Technology, enters the role after Jim Trogdon shared his decision to retire from state service with plans to return to the private sector. Cooper has selected Tracy Doaks to serve as secretary of the Department of Information Technology.

“Eric Boyette and Tracy Doaks have served our state with distinction throughout their careers, and I am pleased that they will continue working on behalf of all North Carolinians,” Cooper said. “I thank Secretary Trogdon for his service to North Carolina and the Department of Transportation.”

The changes will go into effect upon Secretary Trogdon’s retirement at the end of February.

About Secretary Boyette

Eric Boyette serves as secretary and state chief information officer for the N.C. Department of Information Technology. He was appointed to the position in April 2017 by Cooper and confirmed by the state General Assembly soon thereafter. In this role, he leads the state department responsible for all IT procurement, state cybersecurity, operational services, broadband infrastructure, solutions division, data analytics center, the North Carolina 911 Board and strategic IT planning.

Boyette was named the North Carolina Tech Public CIO of the year in 2019.

Boyette has more than 20 years of experience in state government. Prior to his current role, he held several leadership roles in the N.C. Department of Transportation, including chief information officer, inspector general and Division of Motor Vehicles commissioner. He has also served as the NCDIT deputy state chief information officer for Solutions Delivery.

He currently serves as chairman of the North Carolina 911 Board and as president of the National Association of State Chief Information Officers. He is also a member of both the Governor’s North Carolina Board of Science, Technology & Innovation and the Advisory Council on Hispanic/Latino Affairs.

Boyette earned a Bachelor of Science from Barton College.

About Tracy Doaks

Tracy Doaks joined the N.C. Department of Information Technology as chief deputy state chief information officer and chief services officer in November 2015. In this role, Doaks leads the Service Delivery Division and focuses her efforts on providing enterprise application and infrastructure services to state agencies, local governments and universities across North Carolina. Doaks was named the North Carolina Tech Public CIO of the Year in 2018.

Prior to joining NCDIT, Doaks worked for Duke Medicine, where she served as the senior director of Service Delivery. Her primary responsibilities involved providing leadership and oversight in the execution and delivery of application and infrastructure services for all of the hospitals, clinics, School of Medicine and School of Nursing.

Doaks previously worked for the state of North Carolina as assistant secretary of IT and chief information officer for the N.C. Department of Revenue, where she led all aspects of strategic IT planning, implementation, operations, support and risk management. In addition, her past work experience also includes managing clinical informatics and analytics at Blue Cross Blue Shield of North Carolina and developing systems at Accenture.

Doaks earned a Bachelor of Science in industrial engineering from North Carolina State University and then went on to earn her CIO certification from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Government. She is also certified as a project management professional.  Additionally, Doaks received the 2016 Distinguished Alumnus Award from North Carolina State University's Edward P. Fitts Department of Industrial and Systems Engineering.

Besides serving as an advisory board member of MCNC, she serves on the board of the North Carolina Center for Public Policy and Research and also on N.C. State's Computer Science Strategic Advisory Board.