Doesn't help that these are always cheap-o phenolic boards usually with non-plated holes and cheap soldermask. At the temps required for Pb-Free solder reflow, the darn boards will start to delaminate, so it's no surprise that traces fall off. Really, almost all monitors have this problem to an extent, but WG also seems to have a terrible waves soldering process that leaves cold joints everywhere requiring lots of rework. Perhaps they just chucked Pb-Free solder in the pot without resetting anything?
A temp controlled iron is almost mandatory for reworking phenolic boards with Pb-free solder. Don't bother with your $5 Radio Shack.
Oh yeah, boo lead free solder. Just don't eat the leaded stuff, and you'll be fine.

Minimum I've found to re-work Pb-Free is 325C. 350C works better. Issue is that at the lower temps, you sometimes have to keep the heat on so long that the board and surrounding surfaces heat up too much. At higher temps, the immediate area gets too hot and falls apart. It's much easier to find a balance with leaded stuff.
You can flow in some leaded solder sometimes to lower the melting point as you're working. This can help out if you need to re-work the same area repeatedly as it lets you use cooler temps for the later passes. Problem is that you can end up with lots of flux residue or just plain too much solder.
For the monitor guys: any reason they don't use FR-4 in monitors? It stands up to heat way better. Just a cost issue? If so, why do people care to save maybe a buck on what are sometimes $1000+ monitors?