By Romona Baxter- As we continue to honour Guyanese whose lives have helped shape our national story, today we pay tribute to a figure whose influence on media and public discourse spans generations. His voice is measured, his presence understated — yet his impact on journalism in Guyana is profound. A storyteller by instinct and a strategist by training, he has devoted more than three decades to investigative journalism and over twenty-five years to media development, quietly building institutions that continue to inform the nation.
A media architect.
A newsroom builder.
A steadfast advocate for credible journalism.
A graduate of Syracuse University’s S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, where he earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Broadcast Journalism, and the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, where he completed a Master’s degree in International Relations, he fused technical broadcast expertise with a sophisticated understanding of global affairs.
His contributions to Guyana’s broadcast sector are both foundational and far-reaching.
As General Manager of the Guyana Public Communications Agency, he produced the country’s first television newscast, GTV News — now the National Communications Network (NCN) News — and developed several enduring programmes, including Homestretch Magazine, one of Guyana’s longest-running television productions. His work established structural and editorial standards that continue to influence television news in Guyana.
Through EMW Communications and Capitol News, he built and branded WRHM–Capitol News into a newscast widely respected for its reliability and credibility. His investigative journalism extended across jurisdictions, covering major court proceedings in New York, Chicago, London, Bridgetown, Port of Spain, Paramaribo, and Georgetown — reflecting a career that moved confidently between local and international arenas.
In public service, he served as Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the National Communications Network from 2018 to 2020, overseeing significant technological modernization, including the expansion of radio and television services and the strengthening of fibre-optic infrastructure to broaden national coverage.
He also advised the Ministry of Public Telecommunications on ICT and e-government policy and represented Guyana at major international telecommunications and broadcasting forums, including the International Telecommunication Union and regional media bodies.
A past President of the Guyana Press Association and a founding participant in Transparency International Guyana, Enrico Woolford has consistently championed media development, intellectual property protection, and equitable access to the radio frequency spectrum. In 2017, he was awarded the Golden Arrow of Achievement (A.A.) for his long and dedicated service to broadcast journalism.
Today, on this seventeenth day of Black History Month in Guyana, we recognise Enrico Woolford — broadcast pioneer, media strategist, institution-builder, and one of the country’s quiet giants in credible journalism. His legacy is not only in the programmes he produced or the policies he shaped, but in the professional standards he helped entrench — standards that continue to guide the evolution of Guyana’s media landscape.
