ST. LOUIS — Officials at health insurer Anthem announced plans Thursday to add 250 new jobs at their offices in downtown St. Louis.
Dan Mandoli, who oversees the firm’s specialty pharmacy operations, said he expects to hire pharmacists, nurses, and benefits agents, among others, by mid-2024.Â
The announcement was another welcome bit of good news for a downtown that has taken some hits in recent years with high-profile crime and . Earlier this week, the Post-Dispatch reported that property crime in the downtown area has dropped significantly this year.
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A celebratory press conference Thursday morning attracted Mayor Tishaura O. Jones, Police Chief Robert Tracy, and a coterie of civic boosters, including STL City soccer team owner Carolyn Kindle, Greater St. Louis Inc. President Jason Hall and Regional Business Council chief Kathy Osborn.
"It's a great day here in the city of St. Louis, especially here in our downtown," Jones said.Â
The 250 new jobs will add to 1,700 already based at Anthem’s Chestnut Street offices, a company spokesperson said.Â
With an eye toward the 2024 campaign, President Joe Biden on Thursday ventured to Florida, a state defined by its growing retiree population and status as the unofficial headquarters of the modern-day Republican Party. The president sees a chance to use Social Security and Medicare to drive a wedge between GOP lawmakers and their base of older voters who rely on these government programs for income and health insurance. Biden is trying to lay the groundwork for an expected reelection campaign announcement this spring. White House aides have been using the votes and words of Republican lawmakers to make their case that Social Security and Medicare benefits are under threat, while GOP leaders say their statements are being mischaracterized. Even as Biden said his focus is on getting things done, his speech in Tampa and remarks the day before in Wisconsin showed how he's trying to rally the public to his side now that Republicans control the House. In a politically divided country, the ability to get support from older voters who rely on the programs could decide which party holds the White House as well as Congress in the 2024 elections. At the lectern Thursday, Biden held up a pamphlet about Florida Sen. Rick Scott in which the Republican said he wants to require that the programs be reauthorized every five years. “I know that a lot of Republicans - their dream is to cut Social Security and Medicare,†Biden said. “If that's your dream, I'm your nightmare.†Leading Republican lawmakers insist that spending cuts to Social Security and Medicare are off the table with regard to reaching a deal to increase the government's legal borrowing authority. But enough prominent Republicans have broached the subject that Biden told his audience Thursday that, “I'll believe it when I see it.â€