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Privacy Policy

"Charles County is a bedroom community. I'm running to change that."

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For decades, Charles County has grown its population while exporting its economy. Every morning, thousands of residents drive out of this county to earn their income in Washington D.C., Northern Virginia, and Prince George's County — and too much of that income never comes back. The county absorbs the full cost of growth — schools, roads, services — without the commercial tax base to pay for it.
This is not an accident. It is the result of choices — and choices not made. Other jurisdictions competed aggressively for federal agencies, built intentional relationships with military installations, and required development to generate local wealth. Charles County did not bid.

I'm running to change that.

This Privacy Policy explains how the Vote for Cheryl Butler-Walker Campaign collects, uses, and protects information you share with us, including contact forms, email sign-ups, volunteer interest forms, donation-related activity, and text message opt-ins.

SMS TERMS AT A GLANCE

Campaign

Vote for Cheryl Butler-Walker Campaign

Message Types

Campaign updates, event reminders, volunteer opportunities, voter information, fundraising messages

Message Frequency

Up to 8 messages per month

Opt-Out

Our service is free, but message and data rates per your carrier may apply. 

Help

Reply HELP  in any text message from us for help

Terms & Conditions

Privacy Policy

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YOUR MOBILE OPT-IN DATA

This Privacy Policy explains how the Vote for Cheryl Butler-Walker Campaign (“Campaign,” “we,” “our,” or “us”) collects, uses, shares, and protects information when you visit our website, submit a form, sign up for updates, volunteer, donate, request information, or otherwise communicate with us.
By using this website, you agree to the practices described in this Privacy Policy.

CONTACT

QUESTIONS?

We’re here to help.

30 DAYS

Email / Phone

team@votecherylbutler-walker.com

301-675-2101

YEAR 1

Website

Click here to access our contact form.

YEAR 1

Mail

VoteCheryl Butler-Walker
150 Post Office Box 832
Waldorf, MD 20602.

1. Purpose of This Website

This website is provided for campaign-related informational, outreach, volunteer, event, fundraising, and civic engagement purposes. The website may include information about Cheryl Butler-Walker, campaign priorities, events, volunteer opportunities, ways to support the campaign, and ways to stay informed.

The information on this website is provided for general campaign and public engagement purposes and may be updated at any time.

2. User Guidelines

By using this website, you agree not to:

  • Use the website for unlawful, misleading, abusive, harassing, or fraudulent purposes.
  • Attempt to interfere with the operation, security, or accessibility of the website.
  • Submit false, inaccurate, or misleading information through any form.
  • Use campaign forms or contact tools to send spam, malicious content, or unauthorized solicitations.
  • Copy, misuse, or misrepresentation of campaign materials in a way that creates confusion about the Campaign or its message.
We reserve the right to restrict access, remove submitted content, or take other appropriate action if we believe these Terms have been violated.

3. Donations, Fundraising, and Third-Party Services

The Campaign may provide links or forms that allow visitors to donate, volunteer, sign up for updates, request information, or support the Campaign in other ways.

If donations are accepted through a third-party fundraising or payment platform, that platform may have its own terms, privacy policy, processing fees, refund rules, and compliance requirements. The Campaign is not responsible for the policies, practices, or technical operation of third-party websites or platforms.

Any fundraising messages, donation requests, or campaign support requests may be sent only where permitted by law and in accordance with applicable consent and opt-in requirements.

4. SMS/Text Messaging Terms

By providing your cell phone number and opting in to receive text messages, you agree to receive text messages from the Vote for Cheryl Butler-Walker Campaign.

Text messages may include:

  • Campaign updates
  • Event information
  • Volunteer opportunities
  • Voter information
  • Ways to get involved
  • Election reminders
  • Fundraising messages and donation solicitations
  • Other campaign-related messages

Message frequency varies, but you may receive approximately 8 (eight) messages per month. Additional messages may be sent based on campaign activity, upcoming events, election deadlines, or urgent campaign matters.

Message and data rates may apply. Please check with your mobile service provider for details about your plan and any applicable charges.

You do not have to opt in to receive text messages in order to use this website, support the campaign, volunteer, or donate.

5. SMS Opt-Out Instructions

You may opt out of receiving text messages at any time by replying STOP to any text message you receive from us.

After you send STOP, you may receive one final message confirming that you have been unsubscribed. After that, you will no longer receive text messages from us unless you opt in again.

You may also contact us to request removal from SMS communications:

Email: team@votecherylbutler-walker.com
Phone: 301-675-2101

6. Help and Customer Care

For help, reply HELP to any text message you receive from us.

You may also contact the campaign at:

Email: team@votecherylbutler-walker.com
Phone: 301-675-2101

7. Mobile Opt-In Data

Text message opt-in information will not be sold, rented, or shared with third parties for marketing purposes.

The campaign may share limited information with trusted service providers who help operate the website, send campaign communications, process donations, manage forms, or provide other campaign-related services. These service providers are only authorized to use information as needed to provide services to the campaign.

9. Intellectual Property

Unless otherwise noted, website text, graphics, campaign materials, logos, images, videos, and other content are owned by or licensed to the Campaign. These materials may not be copied, modified, distributed, or used in a misleading way without permission.

Supporters may share publicly available campaign materials for lawful campaign-related purposes, provided they do not alter them in a misleading manner or imply authorization where none exists.

10. Links to Other Websites

This website may link to third-party websites, including donation platforms, social media pages, voter information resources, event platforms, or other external services. We are not responsible for the content, privacy practices, security, or terms of those third-party websites.

11. Disclaimer of Warranties

This website is provided on an “as is” and “as available” basis. We make reasonable efforts to provide accurate and current information, but we do not guarantee that the website will always be error-free, uninterrupted, secure, or fully up to date.

12. Limitation of Liability

To the fullest extent permitted by law, the Campaign and its representatives will not be liable for any damages arising from your use of, or inability to use, this website, including issues related to third-party services, technical errors, delayed messages, undelivered messages, or reliance on website content.

13. Changes to These Terms

We may update these Terms and Conditions from time to time. Updates will be posted on this page with a revised effective date. Your continued use of the website after changes are posted means you accept the updated Terms.

14. Contact Us

If you have questions about these Terms and Conditions, please contact us at:

Vote for Cheryl Butler-Walker Campaign Email: team@votecherylbutler-walker.com Phone: 301-675-2101 Website:  Click Here for Contact Form

Signature Initiative

The Indian Head Economic Corridor

Naval Support Facility Indian Head has thousands of federal employees and contractors who are not driving economic activity in western Charles County — not because they don’t spend, but because there is nothing to spend on. My first priority: a Joint Land Use Study, a defense contractor enterprise zone, a formal county-base partnership, and intentional corridor zoning that turns the Indian Head workforce into Charles County’s economic engine. We have seen this work at Joint Base Andrews in Prince George’s County. There is no reason we cannot do it here.

Signature Initiative

Around Joint Base Andrews in Prince George’s County, base personnel and contractors actively drive the surrounding economy — restaurants, retail, entertainment, and contractor office space. The personnel at NSA Indian Head have the same spending power. What has been missing is the intentional strategy to capture it. That is what this plan delivers.

Signature Initiative

Five pillars and a small business strategy

Every pillar is funded, time-bound, and tied to measurable outcomes. This is not a list of goals. It is a governing plan.

Pillar 1

Build a real economic development office
A dedicated office with professional staff, a recruitment travel budget, and a mandate to actively pursue employers, federal agencies, and defense contractors — not wait for them to find us. Funded by commercial impact fees, not existing taxpayers.

Pillar 2

Launch the Indian Head Economic Corridor
Partner with NSA Indian Head through a Joint Land Use Study. Zone the Route 210 corridor intentionally. Create a small business enterprise zone with priority for veteran-owned businesses and defense contractor services.

Pillar 3

Build a real economic center in Waldorf
Mixed-use development, structured parking, and transit connectivity. Waldorf should be a place employers want to locate and residents want to be — not more strip malls. Affordable commercial space built in from the start.

Pillar 4

Fix the infrastructure honestly
Commission an honest capacity audit of water, sewer, and road corridors before promising commercial development. If a project requires infrastructure upgrades, the developer pays — not the residents already here.

Pillar 5

Make growth build wealth for people already here
Every major development agreement requires enforceable local hiring commitments — specific and measurable, not aspirational language. Workforce training aligned with recruited sectors through the College of Southern Maryland.

Pillar 6

Grow from within

A 30-day permitting audit to identify and remove every bottleneck slowing local business openings. Targeted grants for western corridor entrepreneurs. Not just outsiders in — also insiders up.

The timeline

What happens, and when

Voters deserve to know not just what the plan is, but when they will see it moving.

YEAR 1

Indian Head corridor pilot

A designated small business enterprise strip on Route 210 — restaurants, veteran-owned businesses, defense-adjacent services — with streamlined permitting and targeted grants.

30 DAYS

Small business permitting fix

A public audit of every bottleneck slowing small business openings. Published findings. Defined timelines for each permit type. A single point of contact for new applicants.

YEAR 1

First defense contractor recruitment

A formal recruitment approach to at least one contractor tied to NSA Indian Head. Real jobs. A signal to every site selector in the region that Charles County is playing offense.

YEAR 1

Economic development office launch

A public launch with a director, a budget, defined targets, and an open commitment to compete for every relevant employer relocation that comes available in the region.

How we pay for it

Every element has a funding source

This is not aspirational budgeting. It is a sequenced approach that uses existing mechanisms, developer obligations, and state and federal programs — without placing the burden on existing taxpayers.

Funding sources

Commercial impact fees

Funds the Economic Development Office — commercial development pays for its own recruitment infrastructure

Developer contributions

Infrastructure triggered by a project is paid by the developer — not existing residents

Public-private partnerships

Downtown Waldorf anchor investment and western corridor pilot commercial development

MD Dept. of Commerce grants

Workforce development, small business incentives, enterprise zone designation

Federal EDA grants

Infrastructure in growth corridors and Indian Head corridor development

DoD Defense Community Infrastructure

Federal program specifically for infrastructure improvements near military installations

Accountability

How we know it's working

Beginning in Year One, I will publish an annual Economic Development Report — publicly available, plain-language, and honest about what was pursued, what was won, and what is still in progress. These are the indicators I will be held to:

Jobs-to-housing ratio

Measurable improvement by Year 3

Commercial tax base share

+5 percentage points by Year 3

Outbound commute rate

Measurable reduction as local jobs grow

Western corridor business starts

25% increase by Year 3

Small business permitting time

30% reduction within 18 months

Defense contractor employment

At least one new facility or expansion

Core principles

What every decision is measured against

Growth should pay for itself. Developers who require infrastructure upgrades pay for those upgrades. Not the residents already here. This is non-negotiable in every deal I make.

Accountability is a structure you build, not a value you declare. Enforceable local hiring commitments. Published annual results. Real consequences when commitments aren’t met.

Not just outsiders in — also insiders up. Economic growth that imports its workforce and exports its profits is not economic development for Charles County. Every agreement must serve the people already living here.

We compete where we should compete, and partner where regional coordination strengthens our position. Economic development is not zero-sum with our neighbors. Smart regional alignment on transit, workforce, and infrastructure makes every county in the corridor stronger.

Honest about the tradeoffs. Requiring mixed-use development, structured parking, and developer infrastructure contributions will slow some deals. Some developers will walk. The deals that happen under these standards build lasting value. The ones that don’t were not worth making.

Charles County has been waiting for economic development to happen to us. I'm running to go get it.

Cheryl Butler-Walker, PCAM (Professional Community Association Manager)

YEAR 1

Indian Head corridor pilot

A designated small business enterprise strip on Route 210 — restaurants, veteran-owned businesses, defense-adjacent services — with streamlined permitting and targeted grants.

30 DAYS

Small business permitting fix

A public audit of every bottleneck slowing small business openings. Published findings. Defined timelines for each permit type. A single point of contact for new applicants.

YEAR 1

First defense contractor recruitment

A formal recruitment approach to at least one contractor tied to NSA Indian Head. Real jobs. A signal to every site selector in the region that Charles County is playing offense.

YEAR 1

Economic development office launch

A public launch with a director, a budget, defined targets, and an open commitment to compete for every relevant employer relocation that comes available in the region.