TORONTO—Ontario’s integrity commissioner has signed off on the wall Premier Doug Ford has created to separate his government work from his family company.

On Tuesday Integrity Commissioner J. David Wake released the financial disclosures for all of Ontario’s MPPs and confirmed all of them are in compliance with the integrity act. That bill requires cabinet ministers to put their assets — like businesses — in a blind trust while they’re in government.

Wake’s office confirmed that Ford had put his Deco Labels & Tags business in a trust that is managed by an arm’s length person.

The commissioner’s office said that means the trustee can have “no meaningful relationship with the member in question apart from the trustee’s duties under the trust agreement. This means that a family member would not be considered arm’s length.”

[READ MORE: Ford’s family business to be put in a trust]

Ford’s financial disclosure shows that the trust was created last August.

The premier’s wife and four daughters are listed as the directors of the company. In a statement his office said Ford is “no longer involved in the daily operations of Deco Labels.”

Last August Ford told reporters that while he made his wife and daughters the directors of the company they have no “day-to-day involvement.”

At the time he also said that he doesn’t get involved in company operations.

“I’m just too busy. I’m too busy to ever get involved and not allowed to,” Ford said.

Other cabinet ministers who were required to put their assets in trust include Health Minister Christine Elliott, Transportation Minister Jeff Yurek, Treasury Board President Peter Bethlenfalvy, and Environment Minister Rod Phillips.

His work with Deco clients while he was a Toronto city councillor landed Ford in hot water with the city’s integrity commissioner. The Toronto Star reported that the commissioner ruled Ford inappropriately used his position at city hall to benefit his clients.

Follow @MariekeWalsh