Let me speak to the restaurants I've been to, first:
Alegria's - Maybe I hadn't been by the time I filled out the survey, but I went in December and the place was definitely GNR quality and feel. I also agree that their name is super confusing.
Pastoral - Haven't had sandwiches from there, but I went to the shop on Lake as recently as two weeks ago and from a cheese shop perspective, the folks are super helpful and the selection is excellent. Been to the other locations less frequently but they seem of similar quality to me.
Podhalanka - Haven't been myself recently at all, but my girlfriend lives blocks away and eats there on a roughly weekly basis. She loves the ambiance, and the pirogi and soups get rave remarks too.
Burt's Place - Haven't been since the ownership change, but I'm just not a huge fan of the style in general, both Pequod's and Burt's. Would not have been a GNR were I dictator of GNRs, but I can definitely see the appeal that it has to others.
Lao Sze Chuan - I haven't been in a good four years or so but I was never really too impressed with it, even it its supposed hey-day. The ownership issues probably have not spelled good things, either.
As for places I have not been, I'd love to make it to Monti's, Violet Hour and Izakaya Mita's.
To comment on the process, some voters on the Baseball Hall of Fame see themselves as either "big hall" or "small hall" people, and have accordingly set their standards. I view myself as a big hall person, and accordingly am a "big GNR list" person. Because of this, I have often found myself disagreeing with the number of restaurants cut by the renewal process in the past, and would sort of see cutting up to 24 GNRs as a bit of a shame.
To me, the GNR list is sort of like my cheatsheet to any neighborhood in the greater Chicago area, so keeping restaurants which are, perhaps, a bit off the beaten path of the "Chicago foodie hivemind" is one of the best aspects of it, so I'd like to protect that if possible.
I do have to say that I definitely appreciate this more open process as well as more analysis on data. Having good data such as this is never a bad thing, in my mind, but any number of conclusions can be drawn from seemingly objective data, depending on who is interpreting it. For those who are "lack of an active-yes" people rather than "active-no" people, to use Joel's terminology (I tend to agree, for the record), perhaps a starting point of, say, 33% negative responses (such as no longer/never GNR) to positive responses would make more sense.
Anyways, I'll think more on this, but for now, I am still confident in this process to come up with decisions I can agree with, and that this is only a starting point for the eventual GNR/no GNR decision we're all so invested in.