Don't remove SHORT social fluff ...
Remove long-winded crap like
"After being out of programming for ten years I've started at a community college and..."
But DON'T remove social salutations and moderate (SHORT) bridging social English.
Fragments like this are fine and should be left alone:
Cheers. Hey Xpress experts,. Any ideas. Here's a puzzler. Hi,.
It's incredibly annoying when naive new editors, desperate to edit something, naively remove short, harmless salutations
If you remove SHORT (1-3 word) social bridging, that is incredibly lame and very annoying.
So, that's one good approach.
Short bridging fluff includes a huge amount of subtext clues about the nature of the question, the questioner, what they need to know, level of expertise, their position in the site, and so on.
It's incredibly naive to remove this because "it's not computer code".
As the OP says
"I also wonder if preserving the OP's voice is important in the spirit of a more conversational style."
Yes, that is critically important, so long as it's short fluff. And it's not just important because "it's nice to have style", it's important because communication is 75% subtext.
"I was wondering in general what the policy was."
SO has no policy on anything, it's just nosey people giving opinions.
SO is sort of a cross between Ayn Rand's dream socio-political free-for-all universe, and, your incredibly nosey great Aunt who profoundly confuses her opinion with reality and often talks about how "They" know and do certain things.
You should do what you want. If your approach is good it will "become policy."
"tried searching around a bit, and haven't been able to come up with a usable answer"
to their question, regardless of whether they actually did or not, I put absolutely no weight on that statement (and would thus classify it as fluff). – Bernhard Barker Jun 17 '14 at 18:18