- Aug 24, 2001
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Last Saturday (9/29), Dem leaders trotted out 12-year old Graeme Frost to rebut President Bush's weekly radio address and urge President Bush not to veto the expansion of the S-CHIP program.
Frost's parents are described as this more often than not:
Sounds reasonable, right? Well, a little investigating reveals
A little more digging reveals:
The accident that hurt these two kids is a shame and I feel bad for them and their families. HOWEVER, the fact that the kid's parents can afford to send both of them to a $20k a year/each private school, have a home worth half a million, own their own apparently successful business and the property it operates from yet choose NOT to spend money on their own health care and go on the government dole through obvious income tax evasion tricks instead is loathsome.
Thank you Dem leaders, for proving the point of critics of the S-CHIP expansion. People who can afford health insurance on their own have no business being on the government dole taking resources away from the kids that truly need government assistance with health care.
Instead of working to expand S-CHIP to those who don't need it, why not work on making health care more affordable by making health insurance tax deductible and getting rid of the mandates and regulations that drive up the cost of insurance?
Washington DC ? His name is Graeme Frost, he's only 12-years-old, and on Saturday, he took on the President.
Frost gave the democratic response to the president's weekly radio address.
A car crash left Graeme with serious brain injuries, and a federal health insurance program paid for his recovery - the same program that is up for renewal.
Congress overwhelmingly approved a major expansion of the children's health insurance program, but President Bush is vowing to veto it this week, saying the expansion is irresponsible.
Frost disagrees.
?Please don't veto this bill. A bunch of children in America really need this,? said Frost.
Frost's parents are described as this more often than not:
Bonnie Frost works for a medical publishing firm; her husband, Halsey, is a woodworker. They are raising their four children on combined income of about $45,000 a year. Neither gets health insurance through work.
Having priced private insurance that would cost more than their mortgage - about $1,200 a month - they continue to rely on the government program. In Maryland, families that earn less than 300 percent of the federal poverty level - about $60,000 for a family of four - are eligible.
The Senate staffers wrote the script for Graeme.
"My parents work hard and always make sure my sister and I have everything we need, but the hospital bills were huge," he says in the address. "We got the help we needed because we had health insurance for us through the CHIP program. But there are millions of kids out there who don't have CHIP, and they wouldn't get the care that my sister and I did if they got hurt."
Sounds reasonable, right? Well, a little investigating reveals
Graeme Frost, who gave the democrat rebuttal to George Bush?s reasons for vetoing the SCHIP Bill, is a middle school student at the exclusive$20,000 per year Park School in Baltimore, MD.
Graeme was in a severe car accident three years ago, and received care paid for by the government program known as SCHIP-(State Children's Health Insurance Program)
"I was in a coma for a week and couldn't eat or stand up or even talk. My sister was even worse," Graeme wrote. "My parents work really hard and always make sure my sister and I have everything we need, but we can't afford private health insurance."
His sister Gemma, also severely injured in the accident, attended the same school prior to the accident meaning the family was able to come up with nearly $40,000 per year for tuition for these 2 grade schoolers. Confirmation both attended Park found here using edit-"find on this page"-Gemma. It will take you to an article in the schools newspaper about a fundraiser for Gemma class of 16, and Graeme class of 13.
Here are photos of the school's 44,000 square foot Wyman Arts Center: two galleries, an outdoor ampitheater, Meyerhoff Theater, Macks-Fidler Black Box Theater, practice rooms, rehearsal space, and ceramics, 3-D sculpture, woodworking, jewelry, painting, photography, digital graphics studios, recording studio, and keyboard lab.
In a Baltimore Sun article the family claims to be raising their four children on combined income of about $45,000 a year. "Bonnie Frost works for a medical publishing firm; her husband, Halsey, is a woodworker. They are raising their four children on combined income of about $45,000 a year. Neither gets health insurance through work."
What the article does not mention is that Halsey Frost has owned his own company "Frostworks",since this marriage announcement in the NY Times in 1992 so he chooses to not give himself insurance. He also employed his wife as "bookkeeper and operations management" prior to her recent 2007 hire at the "medical publishing firm". As her employer, he apparently denied her health insurance as well.
His company, Frostworks, is located at 3701 E BALTIMORE ST. A building that was purchased for $160,000 in 1999. The buildings owner is listed as DIVERSIFIED INDUSTRIAL DESIGN CENTER, LLC whose mailing address is listed as 104 S Collington Ave which is the Frost's home. The commercial property he owns is also listed as the business address for another company called Reillys Designs which leads to the question of whether rental income is included in the above mentioned salary total
The current market value of their improved 3,040 SF home at 104 S Collington Ave is unknown but 113 S COLLINGTON AVE, also an end unit, sold for $485,000 this past March and it was only 2,060 SF. A photo taken in the family's kitchen shows what appears to be a recent remodeling job with granite counter tops and glass front cabinets
A little more digging reveals:
A check of a quote engine for zip code 21250 (Baltimore) finds a plan for $641 with a $0 deductible and $20 doc copays.
Adding a deductible of $750 (does not apply to doc visits) drops the premium to $452. That's almost a third of the price quoted in the article. Doesn't anyone bother to check the facts?
The accident that hurt these two kids is a shame and I feel bad for them and their families. HOWEVER, the fact that the kid's parents can afford to send both of them to a $20k a year/each private school, have a home worth half a million, own their own apparently successful business and the property it operates from yet choose NOT to spend money on their own health care and go on the government dole through obvious income tax evasion tricks instead is loathsome.
Thank you Dem leaders, for proving the point of critics of the S-CHIP expansion. People who can afford health insurance on their own have no business being on the government dole taking resources away from the kids that truly need government assistance with health care.
Instead of working to expand S-CHIP to those who don't need it, why not work on making health care more affordable by making health insurance tax deductible and getting rid of the mandates and regulations that drive up the cost of insurance?