Well, I'll give you the general rules.
When a new public office holder, or a “reporting” public officer holder--there is a distinction--comes in, we ask for information. It's required that we be given information on holdings, activities, outside activities. So we would expect a full disclosure of all outside activities.
There are prohibitions in the act. If, for example, one is a director of a corporation, one must relieve oneself of that directorship when one becomes a public office holder--again, a reporting public office holder; a lot of these rules don't apply to a plain public office holder, which is why I keep making the distinction. Anybody who is full time, generally speaking, is a reporting public office holder, although there are some exceptions to that.
So the very first thing we do when we examine the holdings or the situation of a reporting public office holder is we discuss the divestment of those responsibilities as well as the divestment of certain types of holdings. That's exactly the sort of thing we'd be working on in that period.