The logic for calculating automatic review bans is described here: Review bans should escalate beyond 30 days
As you can see, moderators may already adjust the duration of the next automatic ban by imposing a manual ban of an explicit length - the next ban will be either double or half of that length, depending on the length of time between the end of the ban and the beginning of the next one.
Simply lifting a ban doesn't do anything to adjust this, and I think it should stay that way; this should be a conscious decision by a moderator. The entire point of implementing this system was to give moderators a bit more control over the process, which was plagued previously by a handful of people who would routinely get themselves banned once every 30 days with the moderators unable to do anything to stop it; the present system gives them the opportunity to intervene at will.
So... Should we? Let's have a look at the two audits you cite:
Python - match and parse strings containing numeric/currency amounts
I'll defer to Martijn's considerable expertise here, but this doesn't strike me as particularly blatant; apart from the throw-away NLP comment at the end, it's a basic "how do I parse multiple number formats" question, with what seems like a perfectly adequate (and short) answer. You may have seen something here that I'm missing (though see notes below), but my gut impulse would've been to edit the badly-formatted list and restructure the title... Not close.
Implementing a language in Haskell: dynamic typing for polymorphic functions?
I don't know jack about Haskell; after carefully reading this, it looks like he's trying to implement multi-dispatch in a language that he's implementing, and is looking for guidance on how to structure his runtime to accommodate that. But like I said, I don't know much about Haskell. Do you? I'd have just skipped it.
Now... You might be able to convince me that my gut impulse is wrong on both of these questions. To be fair, I only spent maybe 30-40 seconds reading each one; I haven't exactly put a ton of thought into either...
...but then, you spent a hair over six seconds reading them before failing the audits, so I have a hard time believing that these failures were the result of a deep, nuanced take on the questions.
Quick reviews aren't always a bad thing; you passed this audit in 2.6 seconds, presumably because an asker who identifies a COM bug can do no wrong. And you passed this one in 4 seconds, presumably because it takes 3 seconds to find the 'spam' button in the flag dialog.
But a question consisting of multiple paragraphs in a language you don't regularly use probably warrants a few extra seconds worth of reading before you make a call.
So, tell you what: I'll reduce the review ban to 7 days. That means your next ban is going to be 2 weeks if you get banned again in the next 30, or 3 days if you get banned again after that.
And in exchange, I request that you please spend significantly more than 6 seconds reading non-trivial questions.