There’s still a long way to go, but college athletes scored a major win Tuesday with the NCAA board voting to allow athletes to profit from their names, images and likenesses.

Still, the decision to let student athletes make money from signing autographs, appearing in commercials and similar things of that nature is being met with strong pushback. The biggest, of which, has now come from North Carolina senator Richard Burr.

He tweeted Tuesday afternoon his plan to introduce legislation that will tax athletic scholarships as income for athletes, who choose to make money from their likeness.

This is an interesting twist in the attempt from student athletes to earn the right to make a profit from their image and likeness. Surely, the new money coming in for athletes from the new law was expected to be taxable, but this is the first argument anyone has made to enact a drastic change to how athletic scholarships work.

It will be interesting to see how this play out, especially for teams in Burr’s home state. Maybe this tweet won’t have a huge impact on North Carolina or Duke football, but it would be a major recruiting disadvantage if the next Zion Williamson is choosing between the Blue Devils and another school, but at Duke, he would have to pay income taxes on his scholarship in order to make money on his likeness.