A new state regulatory agency with former top-dog federal regulator, Rohit Chopra, at the helm. For financial institutions and compliance teams operating in California, this is not a puff piece. It is a regulatory posture story — and the posture is shifting.
If you worked in regulatory compliance between 2021 and 2025, you know the name Rohit Chopra. He ran the CFPB (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau) during what was arguably one of the most aggressive enforcement eras in the agency’s history: $10 billion in consumer refunds and penalties recovered, “junk fee” crackdowns, and a fundamental reorientation of the CFPB toward institution accountability. On May 12, 2026, Governor Gavin Newsom appointed Chopra to lead California’s newly formed Business and Consumer Services Agency (BCSA), a sweeping reorganization that consolidates licensing, enforcement, and consumer protection functions across the state under a single roof. The agency officially launches July 1, 2026.
Chopra’s tenure at the CFPB produced a specific and well-documented set of priorities. Often, these priorities came in the form of industry guidance bulletins from the CFPB’s newsroom. Compliance teams should be familiar with them, and they are likely to inform how the DFPI and the broader BCSA approach policy & enforcement under his leadership.
The BCSA is not a rebranding exercise, but a structural consolidation of several agencies with direct jurisdiction over financial services, real estate, and consumer products. Relevant entities brought under the BCSA umbrella include the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI) — the state’s primary financial services regulator — and the Department of Real Estate (DRE). Also included are the Department of Consumer Affairs, the Department of Cannabis Control, the Department of Alcoholic Beverage Control, and others.
The BCSA launches July 1, 2026. Now is the right moment to assess California compliance posture against the enforcement priorities Chopra has previously demonstrated throughout his career.
The dual-regulator environment in California has always required attention. With the BCSA launch and Chopra at its helm, it requires more active compliance management than ever. Compliance teams have time to re-assess their compliance risk for CA; just don’t wait too long to apply the Chopra lens to your institution’s practices.
ActiveComply helps financial institutions stay ahead of regulatory change. If the BCSA's launch has you rethinking your compliance posture, we're ready to help.
Talk to the ActiveComply team today →