I see a lot of questions which are being redirected to here that relate to the concerns of separating the site for beginners from intermediates/experts, so I want to answer the general question and not specifically this tiered proposal.
I like the general idea of separating the site into a section for beginners somehow (not exactly sure how, and I don't think it should be based on rep). I realize there's this concern that you could end up having beginners or intermediates answering beginner questions instead of the most advanced users answering the most basic beginner questions, but that's not necessarily a bad thing.
Beginners/Intermediates Teaching Beginners
I see a lot of people referring to this as the "blind leading the blind", but only a blind person can understand what it's like to not be able to see. If a blind person wants to learn how to best navigate the world without sight, the best teacher is going to be someone in the same boat but has at least slightly more experience doing it. I realize this is twisting the metaphor, but a child doesn't necessarily learn the most strictly through adults. He/she might learn a whole lot from his/her slightly-older brother/sister, e.g. What the parents teach will start to click more and more as they get older, but even from parent to child, the child often needs the world modeled in a simplistic way to understand it (and their peers, closer to the child's age, will make more sense doing that). People tend to learn the most from those who can relate the most to their situation.
I taught CS 101 and 102 for a brief period, and what I found, especially in 101, is that some of the slower students need a beginner-style answer to a beginner-style question. All the technically-precise answers only served to confuse such students further until a peer student chipped in and explained things in a way to them which was overly simplistic and technically imprecise, but made perfect sense to that beginner student. Beginners and intermediates still remember what it's like to be a total beginner and how they tend to think about things, and what they struggle with.
We're talking about people who couldn't even fully understand a textbook designed for beginners, after all. This is not a case where you want to look around and find the most advanced expert to resolve the confusion.
As an example, I had a student tell another that a C++ class can access private members from external instances of the same class because "classes are basically friends unto themselves". That description made me grimace a bit, but it gave that confused student an eureka moment where everything started to click for him.
The danger of this is that sometimes these informal beginner-style answers can lead to bad habits where the student can end up being convinced that the technically inaccurate answer is accurately describing the situation. We don't want to end up with a 30-year old virgin who thinks that babies are made merely by two people falling in love. Such a simplistic understanding can be a useful stepping stone, but the goal is for it to serve as a stepping stone towards a more complete understanding. Unfortunately there are cases where sometimes the stepping stone is not treated as such and we find this kind of scenario.
But it's often a necessary stepping stone for a beginner to establish some informal mental models of how things work which aren't perfectly accurate. If I showed the ISO C++ standard document to an absolute beginner to C++, little good can be expected as an outcome, only a beginner more confused than ever before. It's the most technically precise document on the language, it's also the most beginner-unfriendly. A language lawyer well-versed in the ISO C++ standard could probably pick apart and tear a new one even for the most advanced answers on this site by nitpicking at the smallest technical inaccuracies and informalities in favor of utmost degree of pedantry, but that level of technical precision would even intimidate a lot of experts if they face this kind of Spanish inquisition who would cite page 647 of the language standard, section 4.7.3, as subtly in conflict with the answer provided when applying the strictest and most literal interpretation.
Expert/Novice Pairings
Just like in pair programming, it's often not recommended to establish an expert-novice pairing since the novice can be intimidated and the expert can see it as a waste of time since the learning/understanding benefits are going one way (from expert to beginner). It can quickly shift to a point where the expert is doing all the work and even more work than he would have to do alone because of the novice tagging along.
The same goes for teacher/student kind of settings. You don't necessarily want Mozart to teach a primary school beginner class on how to play harpsichord. To teach a beginner requires thinking like a beginner, and an ultra advanced teacher is going to have forgotten what that's like.
Imagine trying to teach a beginner how garbage collection works in Java from a perspective relating to paging, locality of reference and the CPU cache, machine instructions, thread safety, and cyclical referencing. A very advanced user would be tempted to do that, and it would just fly over the head of the beginner. Albert Einstein isn't necessarily the ideal person to ask a child-like question about how gravity works, even if the question is formulated beautifully and concisely.
Imagine a super advanced legendary programmer like John Carmack or Linus Torvalds answering a beginner C question about pointers. They might provide the best answer from a professional, technically-precise perspective, but it wouldn't necessary be the most helpful answer to the beginner. It'd also be a complete waste of their time and expertise.
Basic Idea
So I really like this basic idea even though all the questions I see related to this are not so popular here on meta. The site has so much traffic for it and both beginners and advanced alike seem frustrated.
Tiered Site
I'm not sure I like this approach of tiering the site based on reputation. While it's often true that very high-rep users are experienced, it's not necessarily so true in the reverse sense that all low-rep users are inexperienced.
After all, if Linus Torvalds signs up today (assuming he isn't already a member), he'd be a 0-rep user. He might even be too busy maintaining the Linux kernel to get far past that point. The last thing we should do is force him to grind through beginner questions just because of his site reputation before he can get to the juicy stuff.
What I find from the attitude of genuine beginners on this site (independent of reputation) is that they seem to welcome this basic idea as well (not tiered necessarily). A basic question about how pointers work in C++ or how to concatenate strings in, say, Python isn't going to benefit much from an expert answer, and the beginners seem aware enough of their own status for the most part to opt into a beginner section/tag (something of this sort) for their question.
This isn't to encourage off-topic questions. Those should be moderated and filtered out regardless. I'm talking about questions that are legit by SO standards but still too basic to be anything more than a waste of time for the most professional and enthusiastic developers.
Intermediates might still partake being closer to the beginner. People who have used SO for a long time but are still at a beginner programming stage might also partake but help to enforce the site's rules given that they're experienced with the site even if they're not experienced developers.
I'm also in the pro category as a professional developer who has been coding professionally for decades and even longer before that, but I might also have a peek from time to time in a beginner's section to see how things are going there. I imagine other pros would do the same from time to time if, say, the number of advanced questions are few in number on a slow day.
It seems like a potential win-win to me if done right, but naturally there are a lot of ways this can go wrong. But I think there's definitely a problem right now where all these ultra basic beginner questions are spilling out, leaving the experts uninspired, bored, yearning to see more interesting questions that can't simply be answered by a beginner or the FGITW, while the beginners are getting frustrated -- exactly the kind of situation that pair programming warns about against novice/expert pairings. Too much of a disparity in experience doesn't often lead to a productive environment. Too little is probably also bad, but too much is definitely counter-productive for both mentor and student, yielding uninspired mentors and intimidated students.
"yes, it's a terrible idea"
:/
Also, FYI, calling people "trolls" isn't going to win you any upvotes on this question either:P