A now off-topic yet highly voted question that had been closed for three years, was deleted a few days ago. It had a well-maintained community wiki answer (disclaimer: I'm one of the main contributors to that answer).
I've raised the question on meta and two moderators (George Stocker and animuson) pitched in, undeleted the question and put a wiki-lock on it:
Did we really have to delete this 80-vote community wiki answer after three years?
Say it with me: We do not delete good content. We do not delete good content.
The interesting part is how that question and others like it ended up being deleted. Those who voted to delete include some of the same users again and again for each question: LittleBobbyTables, marc_s, Yu Hao, Soner Gönül.
(Side note: As George suggested, we should "apply more community pressure to not delete good content". How can we do that?)
After looking in the chatrooms, it turns out that several users have made a habit out of asking for delete votes, e.g. hakre (1000+ requests), cryptic ツ, NullPoiиteя, Second Rikudo aka madara-uchiha aka Truth, Benjamin Gruenbaum, Gordon and others.
While notifying other community members of content needing attention is perfectly acceptable, canvassing done with the intention of influencing the outcome of a discussion in a particular way compromises the normal consensus decision-making process and introduced bias. The phrasing of the "delv-pls" tag in Chat, while convenient and necessary, isn't exactly neutral.
A similar community process when it comes to deletion is that of Wikipedia. There, canvassing (including campaigning and vote stacking) are considered inappropriate:
This page in a nutshell: When notifying other editors of discussions, keep the number of notifications small, keep the message text neutral, and don't preselect recipients according to their established opinions. Be open!
What is our policy on canvassing, and how can we prevent bias and encourage neutrality? (Assuming of course that these are goals within the policy.)