Don't understand what your saying. Could you clarify about "not both"?
It would seem that landing places would have to be identified by representatives of the ACC schools and once they have landing spots for 10-12 teams, then they would vote on dissolution.
At that point, the 6-8 schools going to Big10 & SEC should have no problem making the other 6-8 ACC teams whole. Especially if its tied to the difference between media rights payments in new conferences vs. ACC.
The Vlog mentioned the current ACC media rights deal would be above the Big12's deal around 2030, which is another incentive for ESPN to be OK with dissolution. Also, by that time, the Big12 will go out to bid again and hopefully Yormark's plan to close the gap with Big10/SEC has worked.
The ACC bylaws almost certainly bar schools with a conflict of interest from voting on a matter. If a school has negotiated a landing spot or a payoff from someone to vote a certain way, that's likely a conflict of interest.
Option 1 would be to find 8 schools willing to blindly leap without a guaranteed spot. Sure, FSU, Clemson, UNC, Miami would likely find a P2 home as long as the networks are willing to put up the cash for it. Are they? We don't know for certain. The B12 would take on ~4 schools if the networks oblige, but which ones? NC State, Louisville, Pitt, Va Tech, GA Tech, Syracuse, Duke? Somebody's getting left out.
Option 2 would be to get everyone on board with dissolving. If everyone agrees to a deal, there's no one to object. Downside is 1 school could stop it cold, and I'm thinking 3-4 might be on the outside of the power conference structure forever with the move. Yes, those same schools would likely end up there in 2036, but that's a ways down a road they're in no hurry to rush down.
Still, why is everyone bending over backwards to accommodate FSU, UNC, etc?
They're the only ones that really come out ahead. Everyone else will get there eventually, and for a lot less money in over the next 13 years.