The FAQ for the burnination process states, in part (link in quote preserved):
If the proposal does not reach a score of at least 20, a moderator will not feature it. Apathy should not be interpreted as a sign of support. If it does not reach the required score of 20 within 6 months, the request may be marked status-declined. If in future, the tag becomes problematic, a new proposal should be started.
So that much is clear. A new proposal may be made for a previously declined one.
However, the link in the above quote says "may be marked" rather than "will be marked", leaving some posts in limbo. As the linked post (plugging the holes) notes:
"Do nothing and wait", seems a straightforward answer, but most of these are already many years old. Newer requests are being marked as duplicates of older ones which will never be heard of again.
This implies a new proposal should not be made for a request in that "may be marked" window.
I recently came across a tag that I thought should be burninated and did some of the initial evaluation steps. Prior to posting the request, I searched and found a prior request to burninate it, from March 2018. It had 17 upvotes (0 downvotes) and was long past the 6 month window. Since it had not yet been declined, I could not use the first option above to repost, and chose to answer the question with the updated information and burnination criteria evaluation. My answer briefly brought it back to the light of day and generated 4 upvotes, and 5 more upvotes for the question/proposal, so it now totals 22 (but not in 6 months).
However, the brief moment at the top of the Meta list was short-lived. Since it was an older post it was ineligible to be rotated through "Hot Meta Posts" and two weeks later, has faded into oblivion. I could keep editing my answer or the question to bump it, but that seems to be not appropriate.
An answer to the "plugging the holes" post notes:
A part of the solution lies in renewed exposure for long standing requests. Everything that is off the first few pages doesn't get exposed, so can't get any upvotes. To overcome new requests being dupe-hammered against fossils, we might want to consider adding a new status tag. [Status-Aged-Away]. We could implement this on requests older then 6-8 months, and then prevent them from being used as a dupe target.
That sounds like a reasonable idea, but as Bhargav Rao noted in comments, "I'm more concerned about the 6-8 months, do we really need to wait 6 months for a score to reach 20? In about 2 weeks, a burn request would get hidden in the abyss. I think 30 days is ample time. If you can't get support within 30 days, then it's clear that no one is that bothered by the tag."
I'm interested in a more definitive discussion of this comment. Can we assume that a tag that didn't initially receive enough support is likely never going to be a problem? Is it appropriate to post a duplicate request for a very old post that didn't reach the 20-vote threshold if we think the tag has become a problem in the years hence? If not, is it appropriate to request that old post be declined in order to enable a non-duplicate new proposal?
status-*
tag, that's just one close to my heart :)spm
tag?). That was actively harmful because questions that should have been tagged with swift-package-manager were being mistagged. The incorrect tags were fixed; the tag spm was renamed to matlab-spm, and a synonym created so that spm is treated as matlab-spm. That really does help.