According to the  Huffington Post, AT&T  inc. plans to take a $1 billion non-cash accounting charge during the  first quarter due to the new health care reform package. The company  has also warned it may cut benefits currently being offered to employees  and retired workers.
The charge is the largest disclosed so  far. Earlier this week, AK Steel Corp., Caterpillar Inc., Deere &  Co. and Valero Energy announced similar accounting charges, saying the  health care law that President Barack Obama signed on Tuesday will raise  their expenses. On Friday, 3M Co. said it will also take a charge of  $85 million to $90 million.
All five are smaller than AT&T, and  their combined charges are less than half of the $1 billion that AT&T  is planning. The $1 billion is a third of AT&T's most recent quarterly  earnings. In the fourth quarter of 2009, the company earned $3 billion  on revenue of $30.9 billion.
AT&T said Friday that the charge  reflects changes to how Medicare subsidies are taxed. Companies say  the health care overhaul will require them to start paying taxes next  year on a subsidy they receive for retiree drug coverage.
 
White House spokesman Robert Gibbs said  Thursday that the tax law closed a loophole.
Under the 2003 Medicare prescription  drug program, companies that provide prescription drug benefits for  retirees have been able to receive subsidies covering 28 percent of  eligible costs. But they could deduct the entire amount they spent on  these drug benefits – including the subsidies – from their taxable  income.
