I think Idaho had ample experience being humbled enough to handle the transition down with dignity. It's definitely revitalized the program, even if it was nobody's ideal scenario. Rivals or not, I'm glad to see them doing well again. The lack of steady second and third tiers on the west coast has been a problem for a long time and it's cost a lot of programs their football teams throughout the years.
Personally I would say that dropping football would be analogous to closing for me. I find Pacific's stance ridiculous, especially considering how little that program had to be proud of. The Big Sky expanded westward in '96 so they could have tried to make it work, though that didn't work out so well for Cal State Northridge, who was just too far-flung from everyone else to make it work. Sacramento State was one of those 1996 additions...which now that I say it is probably explains Pacific's stance.
Basically, Pacific football would answer the question "What would happen if UTEP was a school the size of Tulsa?"
Pacific's facilities were garbage. (NOT saying UTEP's are, I was using UTEP for win percentage). By the 1990s, they were fighting an economic battle to upgrade the stadium to the point of avoiding being condemned.
Pacific's all-time win percentage was .429, but divide their results into "P5, G5 and no longer have FBS." They won a third of their games against teams who aren't FBS now or never were. (Everyone's got those "Pre-Flight" games on their schedules from before the 1940s).
Pacific football was .359 all-time against the current Group of Five programs; .252 vs Power programs.
If they kept football, they would have suffered the same fate as Idaho. It would have taken a miracle for them to survive and get a Sun Belt affiliate invitation.
Utah State was left out of the WAC when the Big West folded and had two years as an independent, got into the Sun Belt as an affiliate. It took an another wave of conference realignment before they were invited to the WAC; where they were "left behind" until BYU left the MWC and the MWC added four schools.
Pacific was 6-21 all-time against Utah State, and well behind them on the depth chart.
If Pacific had somehow miraculously survived, they'd be in the same boat conference affiliation wise as UTEP and New Mexico State, only statistically speaking, worse at football. Pacific has a winning record against ONE team who's in the decimated MWC (UTEP, who just got in, 6-3). They're 27-53 vs the rest.
Pacific was losing 70-21 to Nebraska in a body-bag game when college football was 75% running the ball. Nebraska threw 210 times ALL SEASON that year and still hung 70 on Pacific. NOW, with pass-happy offenses throwing it 40+ times a game?
I'm not saying that dropping football = happy fun times; because it doesn't. All the alums are unhappy, booster donations dried up, their facilities still suck and they've been stuck in the mud for 30+ years. Their real mistake wasn't dropping football in 1995, it was not dropping down to (now) FCS in the 1980s, like all the other schools their size did.