I can provide my own (detailed) perspective on the variable handling time for "other" flags. As bluefeet states, this largely has to do with the incredibly diverse nature of these flags and the fact that all of these flags are mixed together in an unordered nature.
When we visit the flag queue, we see a dump of all flags of all types, sorted first by posts with multiple flags on them and then by chronological order. Posts that rack up multiple flags on them usually indicate something we need to look into sooner rather than later, so those tend to get acted on first.
For sorting, we can refine this to specific flag types: "not an answer", "very low quality", and spam / offensive. The spam / offensive flag sorting appears in bright red at the top of that list, and we tend to handle those before anything else.
"very low quality" and "not an answer" flags are now provided for community review in the Low Quality Posts review queue. They are delayed for an hour before they appear in the moderator queues, but it doesn't appear that extending that time would do much to improve the rate at which those are being handled.
The timing for how those flags are handled largely depends on the ebb and flow of moderator participation. We've had a few active moderators lately called away simultaneously for personal or work reasons, leading to an extension in the number of unhandled flags here. There also have been a higher number of bad flags here lately (people flagging any answer they see below -2 as "not an answer", flagging competing answers to theirs, flagging paragraph-long answers because they happen to have a link in them, etc.). I imagine the number of these will come back down as people return.
The "other" flags are where things often get jammed up. When processing flags, I'm most effective when I can get into a specific mindset and work through all flags of one type, then all flags of another. "Other" flags are all over the map in terms of quality, actions, urgency, and time to process. Aside from chronological order, they are completely unsorted.
I try to approach the flag queue by triaging flags based on urgency and how confident I am in what to do with them. Most of the "other" flags that take longer to handle are ones where either moderators weren't sure of what to do with them or they came in when moderators weren't around and were surrounded by these difficult-to-handle flags.
The "other" flag queue also unfortunately has a large number of absolutely terrible flags. For example, these are six actual flags I handled in a row on Thursday morning:
Sir, i got deadline tonight. Please help. Thank you..
Please I need answers to my question. I'm yet to resolve this
challenge.
please Help for me..........
Need urgent help!!
Expecting a solution
need urgently
We also see a large number of people still using "other" flags instead of close votes, to indicate answers they think are wrong, to demand that we accept a certain answer, etc. All of these flags waste our time and bury legitimate issues.
Moderators have been working with Stack Exchange employees to improve this process, and it's clearly something they're putting effort into. One area that has shown promise is keyword or regex filtering for "other" flags. As an experiment, several of us are using an SE-provided userscript to filter flags and I've found it to be very helpful in grouping types of "other" flags.
For example, I can pull out many plagiarism flags by filtering for "plagia" or "copied" and apply a 1-2-3 workflow for handling those rapidly. Some might be from a week ago, some a few minutes old, but I can process these all at the same time. Likewise, I can filter for all the college students asking for their posts to be deleted (and decline almost all) by sorting on posts flagged by the original poster who have "delete" in them.
Somehow incorporating these capabilities into the system will be a huge help, and I know people at SE have been working on this for a while. Beyond that, I've been thinking about ways of implementing time-of-flag warnings for people attempting to leave terrible flags like the above and catching other cases where flags are being used improperly (migration requests on old questions, any flags about accept votes, etc.).
Sorry for the length of this, but I've seen some mistaken impressions about how this process works and I wanted to provide my thoughts from what I've seen over the years.