Persons of the Year: Danica Adams and Elizabeth “EB” Brooks
Two former UL Lafayette students restored the city’s faith in
community activism — and the spirit of its youth.
By Leslie Turk | 12/20/2006
 |

Former
UL Lafayette students Elizabeth “EB” Brooks (left) and Danica Adams — along with
other community activists — formed the grassroots organization Save the Horse
Farm and have continued to meet weekly for more than year.
Photo by Terri
Fensel
|
|
When she enrolled at UL Lafayette, Danica Adams discovered that
UL allowed students in its department of renewable resources to live in an old
home on the university’s Johnston Street horse farm property in exchange for 10
hours of work per week. She hoped to have her turn one day, and when she found
out the students who had been living there were all graduating, she applied in
January 2005. Much to her dismay, the university informed her only male students
could live on the former horse farm grounds. “They said it was too dangerous for
girls to be living there, that it was a boys’ dorm,” Adams says. “But no boys
had applied.”
Adams refused to accept the decision. She appealed to the committee in charge
of the university’s auxiliary units, and when that didn’t work, she took it all
the way to Linda Vincent-Broussard, dean of the College of Applied Life
Sciences. Adams got her wish — but the exception would only be for one semester.
“I treasured it,” Adams says. “I lived there for three and a half months, the
best three and a half months of my life.”
Unbeknownst to her at the time, she would be the last student — male or
female — to live on the horse farm. A few months after she moved off the
property, Adams learned her beloved farm was about to be sold for commercial
development.
When Adams’ father, Baton Rouge attorney Wade Adams, learned in October 2005
that she and her best friend, Elizabeth Brooks, were leading the charge to
preserve the 100-acre UL horse farm property as community greenspace and save it
from commercial development, he wasn’t surprised. He had encouraged her to stand
up for her right to live on the farm, but says it was her decision to challenge
the rule. “In my mind it was a civil rights issue, and I was really irritated at
the school for telling her she couldn’t live there because she was a girl,” he
says.
Several months later, he knew her fight to live there had been the impetus
for her call to activism.
Danica Adams and Elizabeth Brooks, better known as “EB,” were in Dr. Griff
Blakewood’s community-based planning class on a Wednesday afternoon when they
got word that the university was planning to rezone and sell its horse farm
property.
“I was so upset that I just started crying right there in the middle of
class,” Adams says. Blakewood dismissed the young women so they could pull
themselves together, and outside of the classroom they made a pact. “Right then,
we decided together that we weren’t going to let this happen, and we had to do
something about it,” Adams says.
“That’s what the class was about, taking an active, participating role in
community development,” Brooks says.
Brooks was president of the Society for Peace, Environment, Action and
Knowledge, also known as SPEAK, and Adams was the vice president, so later that
afternoon they turned to SPEAK’s membership for help. With the rezoning meeting
only a couple of weeks away, everyone sprung into action, making arrangements to
set up a savethehorsefarm.com Web site and print T-shirts (visual arts student
Allison Bohl turned the design around overnight), bumper stickers and yard
signs. More students from Blakewood’s community-based planning class
volunteered, as did many of Adams and Brooks’ close-knit group of friends.
A grassroots student organization was born.
“Everything was pro bono; everyone was so good about supporting it,” Brooks
says.
“We had organized the community meeting [scheduled for Oct. 12, 2005, in the
UL Student Union] and made this giant sign from some siding from my mom’s house
she was renovating and were trying to decide where to put it up,” Adams says.
“We had no idea the depth and significance of what we were trying to do. We
didn’t know how deep the deal had already run, how entrenched the deal was.”
Soon after, however, the university began releasing some details on the
previously secretive land swap deal — outlining its plans to trade 36 acres of
the horse farm for 4 acres on Girard Park Drive, saying both were valued at
$3.25 million. That afternoon Adams and another student brought a large
“Pavement or Paradise” sign to Downtown Alive! and also encouraged people to
attend the rezoning meeting (which was later moved to Dec 5). They wondered if
they could get their message to a larger audience if local television covered
their efforts, so they took their sign to the horse farm. Not knowing how to
approach the local media, Brooks placed an anonymous phone call to local TV
stations, telling the station some students were out in front of the Johnston
Street horse farm with a gigantic sign about saving the horse farm.
Adams and her 8-foot sign made the evening news, and the effort snowballed.
In no time, thanks to an intensive canvassing by the group’s members, yard
signs dotted the landscape stretching from the UL campus and Girard Park Drive
to neighborhoods all over Lafayette.
Adams’ mother, Margot Addison, who lives in Breaux Bridge,
immediately joined he organization and has remained active, and her
father was giving long distance support from Baton Rouge. “My dad
said, ‘You have to make this as positive as you can. Don’t
get caught up in burning bridges and being negative,’”
remembers Adams. “From the beginning, my family was right there
giving me advice.” Adams’ sister, Rachel, who was a senior
at Lafayette High when the organization was founded and is now at UL,
helped in the effort as well.
Brooks also leaned on the Adams family. Her mother lives out of state, and
her father, Gordon Brooks, dean of the College of Arts at UL, chose to stay out
of the controversy because of his ties to the university.
“I really respect her hard work,” Gordon Brooks says of his daughter. The
educator maintains he never heard a single criticism of his daughter’s efforts
from university officials and believes even those who may have disagreed with
her appreciated her dedication. “You’ve got to respect her passion,” he says. “I
think she will change the world we all live in.”
The Save the Horse Farm organization began meeting weekly, splitting into
committees that dealt with different aspects of the effort. People were assigned
to rezoning, media, fund-raising, environmental, and community vision/city
planning committees. They even contacted the state offices of Inspector General
and Attorney General to inquire about the legality of the land swap deal. Adams
says people from all walks were calling to ask how they could help. “The
community collaboration on this issue has been phenomenal,” she says.
Dec. 5, 2005, was Save the Horse Farm’s shining moment. In large part due to
its successful effort to educate the community about the importance of green
space preservation and the potential traffic problems more Johnston Street
development would create, city-parish officials were inundated with letters from
residents opposing the rezoning of the property. One after another, students and
local residents — some saying they never imagined themselves speaking publicly
about a rezoning issue — addressed the zoning commission.
With both of her parents and sister in the audience — all donning their Save
the Horse Farm T-shirts — Adams delivered a convincing speech on the importance
of good community planning (based in large part on an e-mail from her brother,
who was living in Seattle at the time). She didn’t emphasize the pitfalls of the
land swap deal or her case for preserving the open space and stuck to the
rezoning issue — maintaining that a comprehensive study of effective planning
practices was needed before any action was taken regarding the horse farm
property. She said the lack of a master plan hindered the public’s ability to
have a coherent voice in such issues and reminded the group of its duty to
regulate development through zoning and codes. “Does the university’s request
for rezoning conflict with or mesh with the current pattern of development on
Johnston Street?” she asked.
The commission overwhelmingly denied the rezoning — a critical defeat that
ultimately sealed the fate of the ill-conceived land exchange.
Throughout the high-profile, controversial process that ultimately resulted
in the land swap’s demise (UL President Ray Authement officially called the deal
off this summer), the two young honor students who have since graduated balanced
their unending devotion to the cause with a high level of maturity and
professionalism, earning the respect of civic and community leaders. Their
efforts also helped save the university about $4 million, the discrepancy in
land values that was revealed after new appraisals were conducted on both
properties.
More than a year after their initial efforts, the pair continues to
tirelessly work for a plan on the horse farm that benefits the whole community.
They have met with Authement on four occasions — with Blakewood serving as
“liaison” — to discuss their concerns and hopes for the property. “Dr. Authement
told me he appreciated my idealism but that the university is not in the
business of making parks, that it’s in the business of educating people,” Brooks
says. “So I asked, ‘how does your plan for the horse farm fit the university’s
mission?’”
Authement might not be persuaded yet, but he does seem to respect their
resolve.
“I think he was impressed by our vision and invincible attitude,” says Adams.
“He shared some interesting stories with us about the history of [activism at]
the university.”
Both women — Adams is 24 and Brooks 25 — have bachelors’ degrees in
environmental and sustainable resources (Brooks, a cum laude graduate, also has
a BA in Spanish). Their loyal horse farm group has met weekly for the past 15
months. “Every single Thursday,” says Brooks, “[except] we skipped for Christmas
and Thanksgiving.”
Save the Horse
Farm member Pat McDonald, a UL alum and devoted Ragin’ Cajuns
fan, doesn’t think their commitment will ever wane — Brooks even decided to
postpone her dream of joining the Peace Corps to keep the local fight going. “I
suspect they would chain themselves to trees before they would let anything
happen to that farm,” says McDonald. “They were there [as students] when they
didn’t know if there would be repercussions, and they just won’t let it die.
They’re the kind of people I’m hoping we can keep in this community. They have a
vision, and they’re willing to fight for their vision.”
Wade Adams, who until his retirement this March worked for three decades as
an attorney with the Louisiana House of Representatives, could not be more proud
of how Adams and Brooks handled themselves. He’s pleased — albeit a bit
surprised — they had the wisdom to follow his advice. “I’ve worked with six
different [legislative] committees over almost 30 years,” Wade says. “You see
this process of confrontation and compromise all the time. What it takes is a
willingness to listen and an avoidance of personal attacks.”
“Back in my day,” Wade continues, “I did a lot of protesting against the war,
even in Lafayette. [They] did it far better than any of the stuff I did back in
the ’60s.”
Save the Horse Farm hopes to canvas the neighborhoods adjoining UL’s Johnston
Street property to assess residents’ concerns and fears about what might
ultimately happen in their backyards and are hopeful City-Parish President Joey
Durel will strike a deal with the university — which they say will ignite their
fund-raising campaign to pay for the farm. Durel says Authement has verbally
committed to give him the first opportunity to buy the land, but no deal has
been worked out.
“Our vision is for it to be a natural area, stay as it is with a couple of
improvements, including [the Lafayette Police Department’s mounted patrol
unit],” Adams says. Ultimately, they would like to see the land converted into a
park that’s strictly for passive recreation, not organized sports, and have
compiled data showing that for its size, Lafayette falls short in offering
public recreation opportunities. “What we want to find is the best public use of
the property so nothing is undervalued and nothing is cut off from the rest of
the community,” Adams adds.
“There’s so much confusion about what we’re trying to do,” Brooks says. “It’s
not about a bunch of hippies just trying to keep concrete out of a city,” she
continues. “We want to raise the money, through donations or grants or the Trust
for Public Land, and allow the city to purchase the land to preserve it. We’re
just looking into all the different options. This is about the community working
together to achieve the vision we all have for where we want to live.”
or more information on Save the Horse Farm, visit www.savethehorsefarm.com or call EB
Brooks at 781-9766 or Jason Faulk at 254-0684. The grassroots organization’s
meetings are held every Thursday at 5:30 p.m. on the second floor of the
Lafayette Public Library, 301 W. Congress St.
HOME