Some helpful nuggets for people with lots of experience
I've been proofreading since I was a college newspaper editor more than 40 years ago. In my current position, we have a tag team set up, so no one is solely responsible for our final products, so we're already doing one big recommendation. That was nice to have reaffirmed.
There's is no way, though, we can proofread on paper, especially while everyone is remote, as not everyone has a printer at home. I have found that I have gotten better at proofreading on a screen the more I do it. I used to find different mistakes on-screen and on paper, but I have become used to editing on-screen and that is less true now. The list of the Top 7 Danger Zones and the START strategy will be useful, and I liked the newspaper proof with it's 3 passes. We'll just need to figure out a way to decontextualize in a screen!