One thing I just thought of: so far the entire conversation here and elsewhere has revolved around singles events. How will these proposals impact Pairs? What comparable changes will be made to Ice Dance to ensure that it's not perceived as lagging behind the rest of the field, old-fashioned and out of touch?
Good point.
For pairs, I think the principle would be the same as with singles -- just there would be more different kinds of elements in pairs than singles, as there are now.
Assuming the plan is two 3.5-minute programs, one packed with technical content and one with fewer elements and/or more emphasis on quality and choreographic effectiveness than difficulty, the breakdown could look something like this (just spitballing here):
Technical Program:
(10 elements in 3 1/2 minutes)
1 twist lift
2 standard lifts from different groups
1 side-by-side jump combination or sequence
1 throw jump
1 pair spin
1 side-by-side spin
1 death spiral
1 leveled step sequence
1 additional element of the team's choice, chosen from any of the above (if side-by-side jumps, then a solo jump not another combo/sequence)
Judged pretty much like the present freeskate, but with lower factors on the PCS.
Artistic Program:
(fewer elements for TES points, possibly emphasis on technical skills not in the Scale of Values along with PCS at a higher factor, and more flexibility about what those elements might be)
Total of 5-7 elements -- maybe some required slots to ensure some variety of skills, e.g.,
1 lift, which may be a twist lift
1 set of solo jumps or throw jump
1 pair spin or side-by-side spin
1 death spiral
1-3 free choice element(s) from the pairs scale of values
If the point is to allow more time for choreography and creativity between elements, then there's probably no need to include a choreo sequence -- those kinds of skills should be spread out through the whole program -- if they happen to be strung together in a sequence that fills the whole ice between any scored elements that's fine, but they would still only be scored as part of the PCS.
It's also possible that the standard pair elements would not be leveled but treated more like "choreo" elements, so there would be a basic score just for including an element, regardless of difficulty, and then the GOE would contribute more to its value than that base score.
It could also be possible to allow adagio moves that are currently illegal in standard pairs competition and that would still have no place in the technical program. E.g., detroiters, headbangers, and other spin/lift combinations; carry lifts with no rotation at all. Either treat them as choreo elements (no levels or requirements) or don't add them to the scale of values at all and just treat them as transitional moves, same as dance-type lifts etc. are treated now.