Do we even need to bump anything on meta automatically?
I guess this feature exists to make sure more "bland" questions like burninate requests don't fall through the cracks and get exposed to more users. But unless we can make sure the bot has a high chance to hit "correct" targets this could result in an averse effect where questions get overlooked due to too much noise. Let's try to do a rough classification of the different cases we have for questions, and which of these would need a bot-bump:
- Posts which are still actively discussed are usually bumped naturally due to edits or new answers, so these are right out.
- Posts which are not actively discussed, which have reached a resolution or where everybody involved has moved on, don't need further discussion and thus shouldn't be bumped. This is basically the list in the OP - old posts, completed/declined/answered posts etc.
- Then we have posts which have no resolution, are not actively discussed, and where OP (or someone else) is still interested in a resolution. Let's call this Category A.
- the remainder are posts which have no resolution, are not actively discussed, and where nobody is actively looking for a resolution. This would be Category B.
For category A, if the original post is old it might warrant either creating a new post, or editing the post to reflect changes or describe why it is still relevant, so these could be actively bumped. If the post is somewhat recent (but old enough that it could be bumped), then we are in the territory of letting it be auto-bumped. But then again, it is somewhat recent and has at least one user interested in getting a resolution, so why not let the user bump it instead of trying to automate this? The interested user could simply do a trivial edit to bump the post, of course subject to some guidelines that describe when/how it is acceptable to bump something, and the usual guards against abuse (*).
For category B, these are the posts which truly slipped through the cracks. Somebody once wrote the question, it has no resolution, but everybody involved moved on. In some cases, this might simply be because the question is not useful to anybody anymore - e.g. a non-reproductible bug report. In other cases, this might be more valuable things like a burninate request which the OP forgot about (or moved on for other reasons). These questions could benefit from a bot-bump... but is this neccessary? If the problem under discussion still exists, chances are some other user will create a post about it sooner or later. And if nobody does, then how important can it really be?
TL;DR: In most cases, bumping a post that needs a bump could simply be done by the users. Where that is not possible because there is no active user interested in the post, the question becomes if it's worth the hassle to bump the post at all. Given that an automatic process will always have false positives and bump at least some useless stuff, I believe simply turning off the autobumps would not make meta a worse place.
(*) If someone is worried about creating trivial edits for the sake of bumping posts, well, we already have a lot of trivial edits because some users simply like to edit posts. I'm not going to name names but meta so far did not see the need to stop some users from bumping old, resolved posts by making extremely trivial edits (e.g. changing the capitalization or spacing of the term "Stack Overflow" without any other changes, changing two words in a single sentence that was already perfectly understandable, or slightly improving tags on old localized questions). Thus I don't see why we should be against trivial edits for the sake of bumping a post that still needs a resolution.