Often I want to migrate a question to codereview, or programmers, or cs. However, we are only provided a very finite list for where to close as belonging on a different site (superuser, tex, etc.). The reason usually given for not giving us options for those more minor sites is that the person making the suggestion often doesn't realize that the question doesn't actually belong on the other site either.
Like:
What is a better server-side programming language, Java or PHP?
With a close-voter thinking:
Oh, that belongs on programmers, I want to migrate it there.
Of course, the question doesn't belong on either site (or any SE site, for that matter) and so the system tries to minimize these sorts of incorrect migrations by not even allowing close-voters to suggest it short of a custom moderation flag.
I think the limitation makes sense, so far as it goes -- we don't want five random close voters to unwelcomely move this question to a site that will reject it. However, the lack of such an option provides an irritating bump in the usual close process. Since we, as close-voters, can't vote to close as belonging on the site where we think it belongs, we are often inclined to suggest that they ask the question on codereview, for example. (In addition, of course, to voting to close for whatever reason most makes sense on SO) However, if they do end up asking the question on the site we recommend, the OP has now created a dup if a moderator were to ever migrate the question over. However, if we don't make such a suggestion -- and it doesn't get migrated -- the user may have no notion that the other site exists at all. (And I think formulating a comment that addresses all these concerns is clunky at best)
I wonder if there is room here for a new queue for each stack exchange network. For sites that are not already on the default list of sites to which questions can migrate, maybe we could still apply a close vote for where we think the question ought to belong. The receiving site could then review a new queue that shows them lists of questions coming from other sites that have votes to migrate questions to theirs. If they vote to accept it, then if the original SO question is ultimately closed, it will be migrated to the site that accepted it (assuming there is no ambiguity between different sites that have been suggested). Or, if the majority voted to migrate to a site that rejects it, it could simply be closed as being off-topic in a general sense.
Among the benefits of this approach:
- Close-voters who think it ought to belong on another site have a chance to communicate this notion in a way that doesn't result in a cross-post.
- Sites where the question truly does belong will benefit from an increase in presumably high-quality questions (since they're playing gatekeeper and moderators can't get to as much as close-voters).
- The OP of the question will have a better chance of getting his question answered, and less likely to feel frustrated because their question was closed on the site to which they asked it.