I have noticed quite a bit of very low-quality questions in the Help and Improvement review queue, such as this and this.
Most of the blame is that triage fails to properly explain to new reviewers on the use of the Requires Editing selection.
To a new reviewer, Requires Editing seems like a viable option to most of the questions asked; after all, if the OP would edit the question to make it on-topic, then that's better then saying the question is unsalvageable, right?
Wrong.
Unknown to most new reviewers - really not to any fault of their own - is the very vaguely tied-in support information on how to pass judgment on low-quality questions.
My Proposal
For the first x amount of times (let's say 20) that a new reviewer clicks Requires Editing, a notification will appear and prompt the reviewer with something along the lines of:
Notice: You are saying that this question is on topic and in an answerable state. This question has minor issues that you can see yourself being able to correct by editing. If you believe that you wouldn't be able to edit the question yourself, then you may need to select Unsalvageable instead.
Continue with Requires Editing Go Back Skip
I do enjoy the idea of community moderating, and while the community should be able to value its own opinion on what is considered on-topic or not - I believe this should still have a general consensus as to what the baseline expectations are and make that clear in the review queues.