In Sara Chipps' answer explaining why Hot Meta Topics has been removed she explains the following:
I’d like to add some context to the “why” we are doing it. Tim, kindly, wanted to shield me from ire, however, in taking this job I signed up for this. I'd like to come here, own my decision, and deliver this feedback.
Stack Overflow Employees have panic attacks and nightmares when they know they will need to post something to Meta. They are real human beings that are affected by the way people speak to them. This is outside of the CM team, who have been heroes and who I constantly see abused here.
I can’t, with good conscience, force anyone to participate in a venue that causes that type of psychological damage at work. The CMs feel this is something that can be remedied, and I believe them. However, until then, I can’t sleep at night knowing that we are forcing people to participate here as part of their jobs.
We're removing Hot on Meta as I don't want to send new people to a place where people have these experiences. Full stop.
(Full text added to avoid accusations of things not being said, emphasis mine on the part of interest.)
I posted a comment asking:
Why don't you stop forcing people to participate in Meta instead of removing Hot Meta Topics?
Unfortunately my comment was worded shorter and came across as rude, resulting in it being deleted (which I accept and apologise for), but I am still interested in finding out that answer to the question.
Removing HMT doesn't stop the staff having to participate here, stopping forcing the staff to participate here does!
So why wasn't this action taken until a better solution can be found rather than the action that was?
@MarkAmery had a good comment that reaches to the heart of what I'm not understanding:
I think this is a fair question deserving of a proper answer. I still don't understand the logic. As far as I can recall (and I may be wrong), staff posts have literally never appeared in HMQ, because they get featured instead - and presumably still will, if the staff do decide to keep interacting here. HMQ is for coordinating important community curation stuff. So why did Sara choose to take an approach that guts the community's productive self-organisation while not obviously doing anything at all to shelter staff from hostile feedback? I'd still like to understand that.