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Vital Update

As I had just found out, the last seen for Meta and the Parent site is different. Therefore, the whole assumption my argument was based on is wrong.

I'm leaving the question so that the answer is not without context.

Nevertheless, there are multiple issues with the site (i.e. off-topic questions not being closed, the review queue being full and no mod participation whatsoever), that I am actually voting to get a new Mod election.

The number of questions that are off-topic being deleted or closed is close to zero!

Old Question

On a Beta Site, the most important thing (in my humble opinion) are active users. The second most important thing are active moderators.

Currently, Health.SE has three moderators (last active numbers are all wrong):

  • Susan, who was last seen online yesterday. Susan is also a moderator on Biblical Hermeneutics. Her newest answer was committed on March 10, 2016 and the newest question asked on March 11, 2016.

  • michaelpri, currently last seen online on April 23rd, being 12 days absent from this site now. Michael is also a moderator on Lifehacks.SE. His newest answer was committed on March 4th 2016, and his newest question asked in April 2015.

  • John P, currently last seen online on April 20th, being 15 days absent from this site now. John is also a moderator on Fitness.SE. His newest answer was committed on March 16, 2017 and his newest question asked on March 26, 2016.

This might be just my impression, but the users I see most on Health.SE are Lucky, Carey Gregory, Pills N Pillows, Butterfly and Bones and L.B. The review queue does support my impression though, as only one moderator reviewed posts via the review queue as the fifth-to-first user.

Review Queue

In my opinion, it is very important that moderators stay in touch with the community, especially on Beta Sites. I can understand that the moderators have many responsibilities and always a lot going on. I also don't want to create the impression that I pick on these 3 moderators as Stackexchange Users.

However, if you, the Moderators, feel that you can not be 100% behind managing Health.SE, I would kindly request you to consider the option of stepping down.

This way it can be ensured that neither of you gets burned out as was recently the case with a few moderators on other sites (we're Health.SE and should be a good example!), and the Community also benefits. Even if no new moderators are appointed or elected, there will be a vacancy for good as everyone will give their best to find a new moderator.

Is Health.SE sick? is almost 2 years old by now, but the issues still remain unsolved.

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To lead off, Stack Exchange has a lot of long-running beta sites and we (the community team) really didn't intend communities to go years before getting their first election. I have an idea about how we can fix the situation, but it's not going to get implemented in the near future.

If any of the existing moderators have gotten burnt out, I encourage them to contact us so that we can find a replacement. Same thing if any of the moderators have lost interest in the site for some reason. Without a clear moment to resign, such as an election or graduation, it's easy to get more and more overwhelmed with a responsibility and forget that stepping away is a perfectly reasonable option.

So, to answer your question, you can ask moderators to step down: you just did!


That said, participating by asking or answering questions is not at all a responsibility of a diamond moderator. Here's a key takeaway from our Theory of Moderation:

A lot of the moderation work is extremely mundane, almost janitorial. It’s deleting obvious spam, closing blatantly off-topic questions, and culling some of the worst rated posts in various dimensions.

The ideal moderator does as little as possible. But those little actions may be powerful and highly concentrated. Judiciously limiting your use of moderator powers to selectively prune and guide the community — now that’s the true art of moderation.

The other takeaway from that blog post is that most of what non-Stack Exchange sites consider to be moderator duties are given to regular users via the reputation and privilege system. If you invest enough in the site you'll be able to participate in editing, closing and even deleting posts. If you see something wrong on the site, you can flag a moderator to take swift action. (For what it's worth, the metrics on flagging show there aren't a huge number of flags cast and they are handled reasonably quickly on average.)

You brought up Is Health.SE sick? When it first came up, I remember reading that meta post and thinking it was a bit too early to tell. Two years on, I think we have a clearer picture from the Area 51 statistics. These don't tell the whole story, but they do give you an idea of what's working and what isn't. The biggest concern I see is that 57% of questions are unanswered. For those who have enough reputation, you can see the problem isn't a high closure rate: 6% in the last 90 days.

The truth is, I don't know why many questions aren't answered here. But I do know that the moderators can't be expected to do the heavy lifting. I mean, an answer here or there couldn't hurt. But most people can't answer several questions a day on the average Stack Exchange site, much less Heath which has to be trickier than most. As long as moderators are doing a good job keeping the site spam- and nonsense- free (and aren't sick of the task), I'm not too worried about whether they are spending a lot of time doing other tasks.

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  • Frankly, I'm surprised we haven't been shuttered yet.
    – Fomite
    Commented May 5, 2017 at 0:00
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    The closure rate is a problem too, in that it's too low, with obvious personal diagnosis questions remaining open. (Non-scientific answers not getting deleted is another one.)
    – user283
    Commented May 5, 2017 at 0:09
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    That said, participating by asking or answering questions is not at all a responsibility of a diamond moderator. - I wanted to use these figures rather to show why one might get the impression that a moderator lost contact with the Community. I think comments would be a better statistic for this, but sadly I couldn't find numbers on that (maybe my reputation is too low...?)
    – Narusan
    Commented May 5, 2017 at 5:00
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    @Narusan: You can see a count of comments and how recently someone commented, but I don't think that's any better an indication of moderator effectiveness. I should also point out there's no reason a fourth moderator couldn't be appointed without removing any of the existing mods. But that won't make the person appointed any more of a leader than they already are. Many good beta sites are lead by users who are not interested in the tedium of being a mod.
    – Jon Ericson Staff
    Commented May 5, 2017 at 5:11
  • @Fomite: We don't close sites so much any more. For more of our current philosophy on closure, please see: Graduation, site closure, and a clearer outlook on the health of SE sites.
    – Jon Ericson Staff
    Commented May 5, 2017 at 5:12

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