There are currently three options under the act. Option one is that you sell your controlled assets. Option two is that you place them in a blind trust. We saw option three in a case a few months ago. My predecessor has determined that if a corporation owns controlled assets, even if it's a sole-owner corporation, that's adequate, too. Those are the three possibilities at this point in time.
I suggested in my opening remarks that maybe we should abolish the third possibility because I don't believe this was necessarily the intent of the legislation, even though it has been interpreted that way. It would clarify things, and there would be two options: you sell or you place in a blind trust.
Many people sell, by the way. I looked at the numbers from last year, and I was surprised to see that the vast majority of people decide to sell as opposed to going through—I'm not talking about MPs; I'm talking about all public office holders. The vast majority do sell, as opposed to placing in a blind trust. We had 18 active blind trusts at the end of 2017 and 46 individuals who sold their controlled assets last year.