Postseason bans may be a thing of the past once the NCAA adopts several significant modifications to the infractions process, according to a report from USA Today which previews a Wednesday meeting of the Division I Board of Directors.

The postseason bans would be among the more radical changes that are being raised for wider consideration among NCAA leadership.

The possible changes are outlined in a document that has been circulated among Division I athletic departments in recent weeks and was obtained by Dan Wolken of USA Today.

The idea is that the changes would make the infractions process faster, reward schools who are aggressively cooperative in investigations and more carefully target penalties toward those who break rules rather than athletes who had nothing to do with the violations.

Many of the proposals originated from the Division I Transformation Committee, which is led by SEC commissioner Greg Sankey and Ohio University athletics director Julie Cromer. They mirror several recommendations endorsed in a signed document last October by 75 members of the LEAD1 association, which represents the 130 Division I athletics directors in the Football Bowl Subdivision, suggesting the changes have widespread support across the highest level of college sports.

“Looking at the big picture, it was a chance — and this doesn’t happen often — where the will of the majority of the ADs and people who run the programs can actually be executed into policy,” said Tom McMillen, the president and CEO of LEAD1. “One of the frustrations in college sports is that doesn’t happen very often.”