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Curt Guyette

Pronouns: He/Him/His

Editor at Large

Communications

Bio

Curt Guyette joined the ACLU of Michigan in the fall of 2013 as interim media liaison before making the transition to investigative reporter, a newly created position funded by a grant from the Ford Foundation. In that capacity he played a pivotal role in uncovering the Flint water disaster. As editor at large, he now provides support to the Communications Department. 

Prior to joining the ACLU of Michigan, Curt worked as a print journalist for more than 30 years, the last 18 of which were spent at the Metro Times, an alternative newsweekly based in Detroit. While there, the topics of his stories varied widely, from exposés that pulled back the curtain on political machinations to tales of individual struggles against systemic abuse. Along with a deep-seated irreverence toward the powerful, his work has been shaped by compassion for the underdog, and a relentless desire to see justice — be it social, economic or environmental — served. Those values eventually led him to a job with the ACLU of Michigan.

Featured Work

News & Commentary
Head shot of Curt Guyette

Opinion | An awful law led to Flint water disaster. Why it is still in place?

Ten years ago, fateful decisions made by a series of appointed emergency managers came to fruition in Flint, when a group of smiling officials raised glasses of water in a toast at the city’s water treatment plant. April 25, 2014, was a historic day, marking the change of the city’s drinking water
News & Commentary
police militarization graphic

White Supremacy in Policing and Education

Following a white militia member’s killing of two protestors and the wounding of a third in Kenosha, Wisconsin last year, ACLU Racial Justice Program staff attorney Leah Watson and her team spent months investigating exactly what happened.