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Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh's name is going to be quite popular around the South over the summer.

The second-year head coach of the Wolverines is hitting the satellite camp tour for the second straight season. According to Angelique S. Chengelis of the Detroit News, the sequel to "The Swarm Tour" will feature stops at the Next Level Camp at Cedar Grove High School outside of Atlanta on June 2, in Pearl, Mississippi, on June 8, Bob Jones High School in Madison, Alabama, near Huntsville, on June 10, the Showtyme Elite Camp near Dallas on June 13.

As of now, anyway.

A lot can change between now and June.

The SEC proposed legislation to ban head coaches in college football "guest coaching" at satellite camps, or as the SEC calls them, "recruiting camps," shortly after SEC spring meetings last May. In the process, it issued a threat that if the legislation isn't adopted, coaches within the conference would be allowed to participate in satellite camps as early as summer 2016.

"[The coaches] talked very specifically about their intent to canvas the nation if we're in the same circumstance next year," commissioner Greg Sankey said at the conclusion of the four-day event in Destin, Florida.

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The time is approaching for the rubber to meet the road, and for the satellite camp issue to finally be resolved.

The SEC confirmed to Bleacher Report that the conference's proposal will come to a national vote in early April at the NCAA's Division I council meetings. Currently, the ACC is the only other Power Five conference that prohibits head coaches from guest-coaching at high school or other college camps. The SEC has been opposed to satellite camps since they first became an issue in 2014—prior to Harbaugh's arrival in Ann Arbor.

The Big Ten, Big 12 and Pac-12 allow the practice.

What happens if the SEC's proposal to ban the practice doesn't pass?

The Wild, Wild, West happens.

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The conference also confirmed to Bleacher Report that the SEC rule prohibiting those camps will cease to exist on May 29 should the proposed national legislation not be approved next month.

That means that any SEC head coach could schedule a camp tour similar to Harbaugh's "Swarm Tour" in Harbaugh's backyard, all over Ohio or any other fertile recruiting ground outside of the SEC footprint.

Of course, that's not "Plan A" for the conference.

As SB Nation pointed out on national signing day, there was a 1.5-million-square-mile swath of the country that didn't have any 5-star prospects in 2016, and that area comes to a halt when it reaches the SEC. Instead of going out into that wasteland and trying to impress recruits who probably wouldn't start in the conference, protecting their own borders and keeping big-time programs from around the country out of their territory is a much more desirable option for SEC coaches.

If the rest of the country disagrees, then we could be headed for the most interesting summer in recent college football history. Either Harbaugh's satellite camps will be cancelled, or SEC coaches will fan out.

"Should that not be a violation, I promise you, we'll do it all summer next year," LSU head coach Les Miles said in Destin last May. "Next year, we'll be in all different locations."

Stay tuned.

Quotes were obtained firsthand unless otherwise noted. Statistics are courtesy of CFBStats.com, and recruiting information is courtesy of 247Sports.

Barrett Sallee is the lead SEC college football writer and national college football video analyst for Bleacher Report as well as a host on Bleacher Report Radio on SiriusXM 83. Follow Barrett on Twitter @BarrettSallee.