The Commercial Appeal

Cordova Triangle rezoned as residentia­l

- Abigail Warren Memphis Commercial Appeal USA TODAY NETWORK - TENNESSEE

The Germantown Board of Mayor and Aldermen voted 3-0 to rezone the Cordova Triangle as residentia­l.

Alderman Forrest Owens was not present for Oct. 8’s meeting, and Alderman Rocky Janda abstained.

The vote comes after two previous readings, which both passed.

While the vote passed, the Owens family, which owns 14 acres in the 19acre Triangle, has filed an appeal in a former case related to their dead father’s land.

Mayor Mike Palazzolo said the board met before the public meeting Oct. 8 in a closed legal session to discuss “pending litigation.”

During chancery court proceeding­s in August, a judge sided with the city and said the judicial branch could not intervene in the suburb’s legislativ­e process, after a legal complaint was filed by the Owens family. The ruling was appealed in late September.

Before the meeting, City Attorney David Harris asked each member to give reasoning for why they voted yes.

During the Jan. 8 meeting, when the apartment moratorium was introduced, Alderwoman Mary Anne Gibson asked city staff to propose removing the Cordova Triangle from the Central Business District and assign it residentia­l zoning.

“In light of developmen­t in the area, I believe reverting the land back to single-family residentia­l is the best course of action,” Gibson said during Oct. 8’s meeting.

“With the change of the area that has developed very greatly (with the addition of Thornwood), I will be voting to zone it back to residentia­l,” Alderman John Barzizza said.

Jim Jacobs, treasurer for the Neshoba North Neighborho­od Associatio­n, has lived in Germantown since 1986. He said his neighbors rejected the urban zoning of the Triangle when Smart Growth was proposed in 2007 and included as part of the city’s Central Business District.

“We’ve been fighting this for over 11 years,” Jacobs said.

Members of Neshoba North protested again when wording was changed last year to allow alcohol to be sold in T4 zoning, which included the Triangle.

“We told them the easy thing to do would be to remove it (from urban zon-

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