The expected move would bring a private-sector tech veteran to an agency navigating major IT modernization efforts.

The expected move would bring a private-sector tech veteran to an agency navigating major IT modernization efforts. Kevin Carter/Getty Images

HUD's tech chief appears headed for Interior

The expected pick would replace the agency's recently departed technology chief and continue a string of leadership changes.

Department of Housing and Urban Development Chief Information Officer and Chief Artificial Intelligence Officer Eric Sidle is expected to soon take up the Department of Interior’s top tech post after the latter agency’s CIO departed, according to two people familiar with the matter.

He is finalizing the paperwork process and could be onboarded in the next one to two weeks, said both people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because the selection has not been made public.

Sidle joined HUD in May 2025 after serving in the private sector for a number of years in a variety of tech-specific roles. He previously worked for two years at tech consulting firm Fabrum Advisors as a technology advisor, operating partner and coach. 

Prior to that position, Sidle oversaw autonomous driving hardware at NIO, served as chief technology officer at ChargePoint and worked as an engineering manager for special projects at Apple.

Interior’s prior CIO Paul “Macca” McInerny — a former SpaceX engineer that aligned himself with the Department of Government Efficiency’s mission — left the department last week after just over a year in the role, with a top strategy official at the agency, Matt Luby, tapped as interim CIO, Nextgov/FCW reported Monday.

One suspected source of frustration under McInerny involved the department’s effort to consolidate and speed up permitting systems — including systems tied to Bureau of Land Management leasing and energy development — that would likely demand significant overhauls to the agency’s IT stack.

HUD and Interior spokespeople did not return multiple requests for comment.

Sidle has publicly discussed his push to bolster anti-fraud initiatives while at HUD, an effort that aligns with the Trump administration’s broader “war on fraud.”   

Speaking at the Government Service Delivery conference in Washington, D.C., last month, Sidle said HUD’s outdated technologies and disparate databases made it difficult to identify companies gaming the agency’s programs, noting that the median age of its systems was 20 years.

“Across different agencies, we’re now talking about how we’re going to be dealing with data sharing, Delta Sharing and all this other stuff,” he said, adding that “even before AI, just the basics of data analytics wasn’t being done — let alone now you have AI, which is going to take off and be able to protect this.”