I'm trying to get a handle on why community moderation works in other areas but not for deletion.
The community usually makes the correct call when closing questions. There are enough voters to catch it if it's done wrong. Deletion is different. There are plenty of 10K users but the tools are very cumbersome. The result is there are very few people performing routine cleanup duty. There aren't enough people to catch (and un-delete) the WTF deletions.
When I became a 10K user, I looked a the "tools" functions and said "okay, now what?" I heard through the grapevine that I could do some delete-post thing if I could figure it out. The more friction, the less people who participate.
SUGGESTION 1
At the very least, the "tools" link should bring 10K users to a specific "10K Tools" tab. Let 10K users know what they can do right there, all in one spot. The rest of the tabs and the dozens of links are cool, but they are eye candy which obscure the primary functionality. The functions under that tab should clearly define the responsibilities just acquired:
- [Closed questions eligible for deletion]
- [Recently deleted questions that can be re-opened]
- ... and whatever other functions you want 10K users to look at regularly.
SUGGESTION 2
The list of questions that can be deleted should show the number of delete-votes they have... right there in the list. It's important to know that voting is underway without having to drill down into the question itself. That visibility is important.
SUGGESTION 3

The "tools" link at the top should surface some statistical information, exactly like the "mod" link. As a moderator, I look at that mod link every day because that number changes and it grabs my attention. In contrast, the "tools" link never changes. It is static and it's easy to just forget about it permanently. Surface a statistic such as the number of new closed post that can be deleted. It doesn't really matter what the number shows as long as it notifies the user of something... anything.
SUGGESTION 4
(This assumes any of the above suggestions start working)
When delete-voting reaches a critical mass, up it to five votes. Deleting questions is certainly more drastic than closing them. Make it five votes to delete and un-delete.
SUGGESTION 5:
Stack Overflow recently added the "Linked Sidebar" so we know when questions link to each other. Maybe deletion should take that into consideration. If a question is linked, deleting it affects other questions. Questions [closed as exact duplicate] get crossed linked automatically. I don't have a specific suggestion how to give these posts extra consideration. Maybe:
- Linked questions are flagged for deletion rather than deleted outright so a moderator can come through and do a sanity check.
- More votes needed to delete a linked question.
- Some extra indication that a question is linked.
SUGGESTION 6
Shameless plug: Consider this as a solution: Let everyone vote at once (delete question? yes, no). It's a way to get more people voting (on both sides) rather than only letting one side vote until after a post has been deleted.