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Board approves 101‑acre Waldron/Blair rezoning and creates IDD to finance $5.5M sewer work; one alderman objects

May 08, 2026 | Board of Mayor and Aldermen Meetings, La Vergne City, Rutherford County, Tennessee


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Board approves 101‑acre Waldron/Blair rezoning and creates IDD to finance $5.5M sewer work; one alderman objects
The Board of Mayor and Aldermen approved Ordinance 2026‑O‑7 on second reading to change the official zoning map for about 101 acres near Waldron and Blair roads from R1 to PDR R3, folding several parcels into an existing planned density residential district.

Giles Ward of Equitable Property Company described the change as an expansion of an existing PDR to add active‑adult and 55+ communities, to lengthen the master plan area and to accommodate a potential grocery partner. He said site reconfiguration was needed to fit the grocer into the parcel and that additional plats and construction documents will follow.

The board also adopted Resolution 2026‑13, creating the Waldron Road Infrastructure Development District (IDD). Consultant Keith Randall explained the IDD is a financing tool to fund off‑site sewer improvements necessary to develop 337 homes and estimated the sewer improvement at about $5.5 million. Randall said that cost would be borne by future homeowners via an assessment “around $1,500 a year, over 30 years,” that the assessment will be fixed for the term and is tied to each parcel, and that the IDD “presents no liability to the city” as presented.

Why it matters: establishing an IDD moves infrastructure financing for a large subdivision off the city’s direct capital budget while enabling sewer work essential to the project. The assessment amount and the duration are material long‑term costs for future homeowners and were discussed at the public hearing.

Dissent and concerns: Alderman Hobbs said she could not support the rezoning because developer promises about traffic calming and preservation of mature tree canopy were not memorialized in writing; she voted no on the rezoning and on the IDD. Board discussion also touched on the timing of nearby Walden Road widening, potential traffic impacts, school crowding at Rock Springs Elementary and the need to coordinate with school‑board planning.

Next steps: developers will proceed with preliminary plats and construction documents; the city engineer and planning staff will review required environmental permits and stormwater plans before land‑disturbing permits are issued.

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