Twenty-four years ago, Daily Guardian was born out of a simple mission: to tell the stories of Iloilo and Western Visayas with clarity, courage, and context.
We were never the biggest. But we knew our voice mattered—and still does.
As we mark another year of our journey, this is not a celebration of our achievements, but a recommitment to the people who give us purpose: the readers, communities, and voices whose lives and struggles we cover each day.
In an era of fleeting clicks and shrinking attention spans, we hold firm to the belief that facts still matter, that context still counts, and that community journalism must evolve—but never vanish.
Our work is far from over.
The economic pressures faced by local media are real and growing. Advertising is migrating, subscriptions are harder to come by, and trust in journalism—especially local journalism—is being tested like never before.
Yet we remain here.
Not because it’s easy, but because it is necessary.
To write Ilonggo stories is not just to publish news—it is to affirm identities, to hold power to account, to spark conversations that matter. It is to recognize that in every barangay, in every coastal town or upland village, there is a story that reflects who we are as a people and where we are headed.
Daily Guardian will continue to innovate—not for novelty’s sake, but to reach more minds and hearts. Whether through multimedia, data-driven reports, or hyperlocal investigations, we embrace new tools while holding fast to the values that defined us from the start: integrity, independence, and public service.
In redefining community journalism, we do not segment—we connect.
We recognize the niches: the fisherfolk in Carles, the indigenous people of Calinog, the students in Miagao, the entrepreneurs and the poor in the city, the women in our homes and lives – all Ilonggos of persuasion and status.
But we do so while holding onto a larger view of the common good—that journalism is not just a service to audiences, but a bridge across differences, a way to remind us that our individual struggles are often shared ones.
This is our pledge moving forward.
To remain critical but constructive.
To be independent yet inclusive.
To write not just for today’s headlines, but for tomorrow’s understanding.
And to continue telling Ilonggo stories with the truth, depth, and compassion they deserve.
We also remain faithful to the principles behind the mottoes that have shaped our newsroom culture and public service: #OurNewsYourVoice and #FactsNotFrenzy.
From all of us at Daily Guardian, thank you for keeping us part of your daily life.
Here’s to the stories still waiting to be told.