The Southeastern Conference (SEC) is looking into changing its policies on fans and students storming the field.

The conference has had “meaningful discussions” about adapting its policies to account for safety concerns, according to ESPN and Sports Illustrated.

Those chances could include penalizing teams with more severe fines, giving up home-field advantages, postseason bans, or other sanctions yet to be determined.

In November, SEC Commissioner Greg Sankey put together a group of SEC athletic directors tasked with revising the conference’s event safety policies in reaction to Tennessee students and fans storming the field and tearing down the goalposts after a thrilling last-second win over Alabama.

No proposals have been submitted, but the process may speed up when the conference holds its spring meetings at the end of May in Destin, Florida.

“Our group is still working,” Sankey told the media, according to ESPN. “Have they talked about things? Yeah. Did they talk about flipping home games? Absolutely. Does that mean it’s going to happen? That’s why the membership gets to vote.”

Following the win, a video emerged of Tennessee President Randy Boyd smoking a cigar and watching the celebration. Fans asked him what it would cost, to which he replied, “It doesn’t matter. We’ll do this every year.”

Tennessee was fined $100,000, the standard penalty for a second offense under the current SEC policy, which administers incremental fines starting at $50,000 for a first offense, $100,000 for a second, and $250,000 for each additional violation.

All the money from the fines goes to the SEC Post-Graduate Scholarship Fund.

These kinds of celebrations have critically injured fans in the past, and Sankey wants to avoid the potential dangers in the future.

“We talk about the dangers for fans,” he told Sports Illustrated. “The dangers of people jumping over walls. Dangers for both teams. Dangers for the officials. That’s the kind of conversation the adults in the room have had. The adults will continue to have the conversation.”

“There are positive ways to engage in postgame celebration that don’t involve rushing the field and tearing down goalposts.