By: Matt Emma
Patrick Doyle, founder of Premier Safety Resources, has always lived with a disposition of calm authority coupled with an awareness that comes from having seen risk at its most unforgiving. Despite being a retired army veteran, Doyleās career did not move away from service. In fact, it metamorphosed into something new, rooted in protecting lives across high-risk industries.Ā
He grew up in St. Louis, Missouri, leaving the state in 2002 before joining the military the following year. His service propelled him into demanding environments, including multiple deployments between 2003 and 2006. During that tenure, Doyle gained experience across emergency response and resource-intensive settings where consequences were immediate and permanent. These high-stakes situations shaped how he understands responsibility.Ā
As Doyle says, āIāve seen tons of people hurt irreversibly with injuries and illnesses. That stays with you. At the end of the day, all I wanted to do was to make sure people are going home on the other side of that.āĀ
In 2010, his military path shifted into safety and environmental responsibilities within a quartermaster unit, allowing him to implement his firsthand learnings about preparedness and accountability. After relocating to Oklahoma, Doyle returned to education, completing his undergraduate studies and later earning a masterās degree in occupational health, safety engineering, computer systems, and environmental disciplines. In later years, he underwent further training in construction health and safety technology, further fortifying his expertise.Ā
āThe field experience and technical depth Iād gained allow me to dive into complex industrial, power, electrical, and pipeline projects two years later,ā Doyle shares. He worked with decision-makers, like contractors, operators, and regulators, often translating regulatory requirements into workable solutions.Ā
āBusiness owners are focused on keeping operations funded and productive,ā he explains. āMy role was to be the liaison, help them understand their risk and position their expectations in a way that makes sense without disrupting productivity.āĀ
Over the course of the decade, Doyle helped build two safety consulting businesses and soon founded his own. In 2016, he founded Premier Safety Resources (PSR) shortly after retiring from the military. āIt was the extension of all the lessons I learnt over the years while encountering perilous situations,ā he adds.Ā
Today, PSR supports a large number of contractors simultaneously, operating as an economical, part-time Environment, Health, and Safety (EHS) partner for small businesses that require serious expertise without the overhead of an in-house department. Doyle underscores this commitment to client-support, which has enabled the company to grow without large advertising campaigns or formal partnerships. āI havenāt done any major marketing in years,ā he says. āWe maintain the relationships, do the work the right way, and that momentum carries forward.ā
Clients experience PSR less as a consultancy and more as an extension of their leadership teams. Doyle works closely with owners and managers to build trust from the field, addressing the ācowboyingā culture that often emerges in high-risk environments. āMost people donāt comprehend the risks and liabilities that exist within those spaces,ā he says. āOur work lies in limiting those risks and protecting the workforce.āĀ

(Patrick Doyle, founder of Premier Safety Resources)
Doyle treats each year as an opportunity to research and expand his capabilities. As PSR encompasses training programs, Doyle contributes to its curriculum development and remains active in professional organizations. Additionally, he pursues new certifications with a passionate intensity. āIn my career as a safety professional, Iāve tried to be universal and have an exorbitant amount of understanding,ā he shares. āItās an ongoing process of learning new skills and adding them to the encyclopedia. There are always better ways to protect people.āĀ
With social responsibility remaining at the center of his work, Doyleās mission also expands to those transitioning out of military service. Through his nonprofit, Industrial Workforce Solutions, he aims to actively mentor veterans entering safety careers, reduce workforce shortages, and help them find stable, meaningful roles. āMy focus is helping my brothers and sisters find footing,ā Doyle explains. āGiving them qualifications, helping them get to work, and making sure they can support their families.ā
As the nonprofit continues to materialize, Doyleās future plans also include deepening relationships with existing clients, expanding PSRās regional footprint, and completing his doctorate. Ultimately, service, for Patrick Doyle, never ended. It simply took on a different uniform.Ā



