Doug Ford, seen here in a file photo, announced his party's plan to end sex ed in Ontario. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young

After telling reporters in March he would meet with Ontario’s integrity commissioner within days, Doug Ford has yet to make that meeting happen.

A month ago Ford told reporters he would be erecting a wall between his political life and his family-owned company by putting his company — Deco Labels & Tags — into a trust. At the time, he had no details about how that would work, saying the information would come out of his pending meeting with the integrity commissioner.

“I’m going to put it in trust and that’s what I’ll discuss with the integrity commissioner, so I plan on sitting down with the integrity commissioner over the next couple days,” the Progressive Conservative leader told reporters on March 20.

READ MORE: Ford promises to put family business in a trust

As of Thursday that meeting hadn’t yet happened but, without disclosing a date, the party said one was scheduled.

While the legislated 60-day deadline to file a financial disclosure and meet with Integrity Commissioner J. David Wake has not passed, Ford’s spokesperson wouldn’t explain why the PC leader hadn’t met with Wake within his own self-imposed timeline.

“The meeting has not happened yet, and when it does he looks forward to following the advice of the commissioner,” party spokesperson Melissa Lantsman said.

Very little information is publicly disclosed about Ford’s privately held company. The Toronto Star reported last month that Deco moves $100 million in sales. The company’s website shows it has offices in Toronto and Chicago. And in 2014, the Globe and Mail reported that the company had 250 employees.

The Tory leader is listed as the company’s sole director.

On Wednesday, Ford acknowledged that his plan to cut corporate taxes by one percentage point would benefit his company but he said only by “very little.”

READ MORE: Ford says his company would gain ‘very little’ from his tax cuts

The law only requires members of the executive to put their businesses in a trust. The act says trustees must be “arm’s length” and approved by the commissioner. However, Ford suggested in March that he would put it in trust either way.

“We’re going to put it in trust and I’ll have further information on that once I speak to the integrity commissioner,” he said. Adding that the meeting would happen in a “few days.”

Ford often points to his business experience as a key skill that he would bring to the premier’s office, but it also presents opportunity for conflicts of interest.

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.

Liberal MPP and campaign co-chair Deb Matthews said the “problem” is that Ford isn’t doing something he said he would.

“I think that he needs to keep his promises and if he made a statement and hasn’t followed through that just adds to questions about his veracity,” she said.

Matthews said it’s a “concern” that Ford has already announced policies that would benefit Deco. She said his first instinct to meet quickly with the integrity commissioner was the “right way” to go about it.

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