First, some comments on the general question that you raise. Another obvious example of this was the Time to take a stand post from awhile back. That received numerous close votes from people who argued that it was basically an extended rant (which it kind of was). It now has a historical-lock on it by a staff member, which has the following text:
This question exists because it has historical significance, but it is not considered a good, on-topic question for this site so please do not use it as evidence that you can ask similar questions here. This question and its answers are frozen and cannot be changed.
Given that this is an implicit admission from the staff that the question was, in fact, off-topic, this kind of makes you wonder why it was reopened every time that the community tried to close it. At a minimum, this really looks like "sure, it's off-topic, but we really want to do that anyway."
Now, as for the post that they actually ask about. By definition, Meta is for topics that the staff actually wants feedback on. If they want to make an announcement but aren't interested in getting feedback on it (and it really appears that, in this case, they aren't), they should post it on their blog instead. If they don't want feedback and/or don't intend to act on the feedback, just make a blog post instead.
The post that this is about is currently the second-least-popular Meta post that's still available on the site (albeit by only a small margin - it could easily surpass that one as the most-unpopular proposal still shown on the site in the very near future).
In the case of the most-unpopular post, at least SE backed down and modified the proposal in response to community feedback and came up with a solution that everyone was happy about. I see no evidence of a similar willingness to compromise in this case. The fact that they evidently implemented the change almost immediately without even waiting to see what the community reaction was, along with how unresponsive staff has been to criticism of the post, kind of tells you how much feedback they want on this.
That being said, the close reason ("does not appear to seek input or discussion from the community") is perfectly accurate in this case - they don't want input. Independently of whether you think that they should solicit community input on this (and I think that they should), from a purely process perspective if they don't really want feedback they should put this on their blog instead. Even staff posts have to be on-topic; there's no reason that they should get special exemptions.
Also, if they really don't plan to incorporate our feedback, they should just be honest about that fact. The way that they did this looks cynical, dishonest, and high-handed.
TL;DR Meta's just for stuff that they want feedback on, and they clearly don't want feedback on this, so it's off-topic.