Before I comment here: I am a fan of systemd in many ways, and I happily use it on my systems. That being said, you do really have to think about the systemic factors at play here. As noted in the original article, Debian found itself in a position where the amount of work to sustain a non-systemd path in a systemd-dominated ecosystem would be too much work _for them_. If you personally have more development time then the entirety of the Debian project, then by all means. Let's just not assume that this is a feasible thing for a single person to handle, and really for all intents and purposes, trying to maintain a Linux distribution (or even just a personal Linux system) without using systemd at this point is folly, no matter how much you dislike it.
That being said, SysV init is (in fact) terrible. I'd say put the effort into something that can supercede systemd some day. That part of the problem is tractable, though success is quite a long-shot given its entrenchment.