I have several questions both about the removal, as well as related to Sara's answer (which were initially asked in chat, but all except one appear to have been outright ignored, so I'm upgrading this to an answer).
First off, I've seen several inconsistencies between what you've said, and what has actually happened. The blog post completely nailed the cause of the anger, which along with the implementation of feature requests and so far fantastic work from the development team made me hope the site could improve. Yaakov Ellis wrote an answer to a "thank you" question after feature requests started being implemented and wrote something you should think about:
[...] I hope that we are able to continue to (re)earn your collective trust in this area.
At least to me, you were doing well until this.
But what you're now saying is that you're removing Hot Meta Posts because "I have not observed this to be a place where people are polite and professional." and you therefore "don't want to send new people to a place where people have these experiences."? As far as I can tell from the answer, it outlines bad psychological effects on employees, because meta is unpolite. Personally, I feel the positives are assigned less weight, even though you claim you're not overlooking positives.
It also took you three months to reply to the Facebook thread, a thread that needed a staff reply much earlier. Not because we need a fix now, but to know that you're at least aware of it, and plan to take action (or for that matter, don't), at least in 6-8 arbitrary time units.
I can’t, with good conscience, force anyone to participate in a venue that causes that type of psychological damage at work.
The reason you're doing this, to me, appears to be to protect employees. I understand the point, but removing Hot Meta Posts is a bit like hiding under a tarp while there's a tornado heading for you. Meta is still here, the same users are still here, and the employees are still apparently forced to participate in meta.
This leads to a question: Why are you forcing employees to participate in meta when you know it's bad for their mental health? If you're really doing this, then I feel sorry for your employees, but you are still partially at blame for creating an environment like that.
But why does protecting employees result in removing a feature that only helps users who are less active on meta stay up to date?
Hot Meta Posts has never forced anyone to participate. It's a suggestion for stuff to read and maybe participate in. The removal resulted in the moderators reaching out for ideas. The highest upvoted idea at the time of writing is creating a script that uses views and votes to determine what should be featured. Doesn't that sound an awful lot like Hot Meta Posts to you? The only difference, if implemented, will probably be a minor algorithm difference, but overall result in the same recommendations. Potentially, all you're going to end up with is Hot Meta Posts in a different form, manually rewritten from scratch under a different name.
So, who are you trying to protect?
Users will find their way here in one way or another. Employees are (were?) apparently forced to participate here as well, so why remove it at all?
So far in this discussion, I've seen meta being pictured as an impolite, unprofessional place, and that's why they're depriving users of meta updates. SO, meta, and the rest of the network, in spite of those few users who really are rude and unprofessional, is still one of the few sites I actually feel safe on.
If something nasty shows up, there are flags, and moderators who review them, and take action. Last I checked, employees have as much access to flags as regular users, if not more (especially if they have cross-site diamonds).
Remember reprex? It was, until this question, the most downvoted question of all time here on meta. After user feedback (not personal attacks and "you should feel bad for suggesting such an idea"), Shog used that to create a middle-ground term, which really is an improvement.
If the issue is negativity, decisions like this one will not give you a better view of how the community react. Hell, I'm negative to this change, presumably along with the (currently) 403 users who downvoted the question. You can't get around negativity, but negativity isn't inherently bad. Toxicity is bad, however, and by giving moderators full access over [featured], you're indirectly forcing them to take on more responsibility, while trying to handle toxicity, potentially slowing down response times (which have been amazing up until recently, with a response time on flags in a few minutes, if not seconds).
Just to be clear, I'm not trying to invalidate employee experiences, but your answer and chat reply still makes it look like you see meta as filled with a bunch of evil people out to get employees whenever possible. Someone in chat mentioned that question as an exception, and pointed to the emoji thread, but the question itself doesn't appear to attack anyone.
If HMP really was removed to prevent users from coming to meta, that kind of explains your motivation behind the new homepage...
If you're trying to protect employees with this, then you've more or less failed. Employee posts can still be featured, either manually, or automatically if the script is created.
Have you thought about the moderators? The ones you're now pushing more work on? They're already busy enough because of the system in which there's a very limited amount of moderators. You're also pushing away all kinds of users - both users who may have an interest in meta, as well as people like me (at least a month ago) who's a passive meta reader.
Have you thought about what happens when there's conflict about the tag? What do you do if there's disagreement and it turns into a featured rollback war? The chance of a rollback war happening are low because, well, moderators, but there's still a chance it can happen.
Not to forget about flags - IIRC, the idea is to flag posts that should be featured. How long does it take until the flag queue here on meta requires as much job as on main, if not more? What do you do if moderators stop reviewing meta flags entirely to focus on main?
Problems
- You're loading the few moderators with even more work
- You're depriving passive meta users of access to posts
- You're removing it to potentially be replaced with a script that does, well, the exact same thing HMP does.
- The psychological well-being of employees is still an issue
Also, does this seem right?
Two additional featured posts suppressed this one. How do you now expect to present critical posts "everyone" must see alongside posts of potential interest? HMP appears to be capable of several, and live alongside featured on meta.
What's worse is that this is actually by design.
If meta is the problem as a system, replace it. I know you have plans to find an alternative, but temporarily reducing access to it while you're literally 6-8 arbitrary time units away from finding alternatives isn't good for the community.
You have stated 0.015% of the active users are on meta. Do you really think removing one of the things that get people on meta will improve that? You're still reducing access to important posts, which will still result in a minority of users being represented. If you want more people to be represented, you need to give them a way to find posts without having a meta tab open 24/7. You can create an organized system, add banners for users, let users subscribe to notifications for posts that go into a voting stage, lower the meta voting requirement, but you don't remove one of the access ways to meta, and only leave a tiny, hidden URL in a dropdown that's pushed off the screen on small devices so you can advertise your own products.
Stack Overflow is a massive site, and I bet most users have enough work getting used to main to get started on meta when they hit 5 rep. Also, of those 0.015% of active users who participate on meta, is that with or without <5 rep users? ~27% of all users have access to meta (which is your fault for setting a requirement to participate). Not that it matters, since meta is deprioritized anyway.
No matter how you look at it, breaking down communication further while you try finding an alternative to meta will not benefit anyone. We're still stuck with this system, and breaking it further won't help with consensus on future cases, and it won't help with the meta participation percentage.
featured
tag and got excited. So I assume they simply did away with that tag.