Treasury Special Advisor Raj Date, the acting head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, told lawmakers last week that the bureau will begin a review later this month of the federal regulations it inherited that affect consumers and financial firms to identify those that may be obsolete, unnecessary, redundant or counterproductive. The goal is to update and streamline the regulations, Date told the House Financial Services Financial Institutions Subcommittee during a hearing on the first 100 days of the CFPB. One of the bureaus central responsibilities is to identify and address outdated, unnecessary or unduly burdensome regulations, the agency chief said. The bureau has a unique opportunity to streamline and simplify rules to ensure that they are truly making consumer financial markets work better.