I'm going to play devil's advocate for a moment.
Sometimes people post questions and they imply there's some social/business/technical reason for not doing something, but they never state what that reason is. It's often important to know that reason in order to write an answer that meets the needs of the person asking the question. Otherwise you write an answer that you think will be a solid, usable solution. But then it turns out you wasted your time because they didn't let you know all the limitations.
I don't think it warrants a closing for not having provided those details up front, but I will downvote a question if someone went through the effort of posting a good solution that was nullified by hidden requirements. And of course, I leave a comment saying that they need to express the question as completely as reasonably possible up front in order to receive a good solution.
In this case, the question should have not been closed, and I appreciate they said the schema can't be modified up front. But then if you note the comment below by the asker:
I can create new objects, constraints, triggers, etc. I cannot alter
the columns of the existing tables (which will continue being inserted
to and updated).
That's the type of thing that I think should have been included in the question up front had the question been fully thought through. On one hand, he says he can't change the schema, but then he says he can change objects, constraints, triggers. Wikipedia defines schema as:
In a relational database, the schema defines the tables, fields,
relationships, views, indexes, packages, procedures, functions,
queues, triggers, types, sequences, materialized views, synonyms,
database links, directories, XML schemas, and other elements.
Therefore, someone might have assumed from the beginning that he wasn't allowed to modify these things, resulting in much more complicated answers.