Future of Ground Zero mosque property to be decided by vote

Future of Ground Zero mosque property to be decided by voteA member of the New York City preservation commission vote said on Monday that the panel will likely move the so-called Ground Zero mosque closer to reality.

It has been reported that the Landmarks Preservation Commission is expected to take up a proposal Tuesday that would designate a 19th century building now on the site as a landmark, effectively blocking construction of the controversial mosque and Muslim community center. But board member Stephen Byrns told ABCNews. com he expects the vote to be "overwhelmingly against" the historic preservation designation.

Byrns didn't say how he intends to vote on the issue, only one of several hurdles the Cordoba Initiative faces.

It had already been reported that the mosque project, close to where the twin towers of the World Trade Center stood until smashed into and toppled Sept. 1, 2001, by jetliners commandeered by Muslim extremists, has drawn heated criticism from an array of city residents, politicians, members of a major Jewish group and Americans at large who view it as a slap in the nation's collective face.

His vote forecast was predicated on "a little bit" of conversation with his colleagues on the board "and looking at the issue," Byrns told ABC.

The board would not weigh "how close is too close," but rather the "historical and architectural significance" of the Italian Renaissance palazzo building erected between 1857 and 1858 that housed a Burlington Coat Factory, he further added. (With Inputs from Agencies)