The sad truth is, nobody has the foggiest idea what "very low quality" (VLQ) flags on questions are for. This, of course, means that I can't give you an actual answer to your question or even any clear guidance on what to do.
Flaggers don't know or agree on what the VLQ flag means, and neither do moderators. Personally, I mark VLQ flags on questions "helpful" whenever I can understand why the flagger might consider the question to be unsalvageable. That's the only official guidance that really exists for these flags, and it matches what the summary text says in the dialog. I can't bring myself to decline a VLQ flag on a post that fits the description "very low quality" to a T. Often, I will cast a binding vote to close the question, which will automatically mark all pending VLQ flags as helpful. Quick, easy, and convenient.
Except…totally broken. Moderators aren't really supposed to be your personal question-closing valets, and getting a moderator to come in and single-handedly close a question just because you flagged it VLQ instead of (or in addition to) flagging it as needing to be closed is arguably an abuse of the system. If everyone did this, we'd have ~10k VLQ flags in the queue—just like the close queue does now. Nobody can reasonably process all of those, even with binding votes, and so they'd just build up, clog our tubes, and eventually have to start aging away.
Also, since there is no consensus on what VLQ flags on questions are for, not all moderators handle them in exactly the same way I do. There are several other moderators who will decline VLQ flags unless they feel the entire question needs to be immediately deleted. To skip closure and go straight to unconditional moderator-imposed deletion is a pretty high bar (remember, nobody can even undelete a post deleted by a moderator, except for other moderators), so pretty much the only VLQ flags that they mark helpful are ones raised on total gibberish. This is perhaps a more sane and scalable approach, adhering a bit closer to Jeff Atwood's vision for the VLQ flag from back in 2011, but there are still a host of problems with this interpretation. Among them are ambiguity, redundancy, and a need to predict the future.
If VLQ is really just for total gibberish, like a cat walking across a keyboard, then it's unclear how it is any different from the "rude or abusive" flag. Cats are not allowed to walk across keyboards on Stack Exchange sites; this already qualifies as abuse of our resources. Maybe VLQ is supposed to be a "this is abusive, but I don't think it deserves a −100 reputation penalty, so I'm flagging it with this other flag instead" flag, but I say pish posh to that. If the community has decided that posting utter garbage should result in a −100 point penalty, then that's what should happen. If they don't think so, then the implementation should be changed such that rude/abusive doesn't automatically impose such a penalty. We don't need two flags that mean essentially the same thing and differ only in terms of punishment. Flaggers shouldn't even be deciding punishments anyway: that is the sole responsibility of moderators, who have insider knowledge both about the system and the history of the user(s) involved.
Furthermore, using VLQ on questions that are "unlikely to be salvageable through editing" is asking the flagger to predict the future. How are you supposed to accurately predict the likelihood that a question can be salvaged by editing? I've made edits to a fair number of questions that rescued them from the brink of unsalvageability. And whose edits are we talking about here? If we include edits from the author, then "debug my code" questions that lack code can always be salvaged by editing in the code. If we exclude original author edits, then those questions are always unsalvageable because there's no possible way that anyone else could edit in the author's code.
Finally, even where the flagger has good chance of correctly predicting the future—e.g., on questions like "How can I upgrade to Windows 10?" and "What's the weather like in Peru?", which are obviously of extremely low quality and cannot possibly be edited into shape to fit our guidelines—the VLQ flag is still redundant and pointless, because we have close reasons for these questions. When does an obviously off-topic question get to skip closure and go straight for VLQ-imposed deletion? What's the brightline? How would this possibly scale?
Again, Jeff's interpretation is that VLQ flags are appropriate for questions that we would normally just close, such as "I got this exception: <stack trace>". That's a perfect candidate for the "lacks MCVE" close reason. When do I flag as VLQ, and when do I vote to close? Or do I do both? Why should some questions be handled differently than others? (Ah yes, and that brings us right back to your question. No, I still don't know the answer.)
But, Jeff's guidance aside, everything else seems to indicate that the VLQ flag is more of a "requires editing" flag. Plenty of flaggers treat them this way, as does a large subset of Meta guidance. The system certainly seems to treat these flags that way, too, using them to enqueue posts in Triage, and automatically dismissing them as "helpful" when a post gets edited (no matter how substantial the edit). (The pointlessness of the Triage queue is a soapbox for another day.) The problem with this is obvious: we don't need a "requires editing" flag. Either you (the flagger) should be performing the edit yourself, or if you can't because only the original author could perform the necessary edit, then you should be flagging/voting to close it. There is nobody else out there monitoring the LQ queue who is going to be able to edit the question into shape when you (the flagger) can't, and the only "flag" that gets raised for the original asker to take action is the closure flag.
I suspect that the VLQ flag is just a historical relic from the time before a "requires closure" flag could be raised by anyone. VLQ was just a flag for <3k reputation users without close-vote privileges to indicate problematic questions. That problem has already been addressed, largely because the VLQ flag wasn't serving the purpose effectively.
So, what really needs to happen is that the VLQ flag on questions needs to be eliminated. VLQ questions should be dealt with in the normal way, by downvoting, closing, and deleting them. That way, no one is required to predict the future. If, in between the time that the question gets closed and deleted, some brave and all-knowing soul is able to edit the question into shape, then that would save it from its impending deletion. If not, and in the normal case, then bye-bye it goes. Moderators have wanted to get rid of VLQ flags on questions for a long time, essentially echoing my sentiments here.
Shog9 hinted at having a similar view back in 2014:
So what's interesting here is that the existing LQ review works really well for answers, but is... kinda broken for questions, where it's pretty much just a really inefficient way of prioritizing things in the Close queue - meaning a question might already have to go through three different queues before it's done. If the final destination for "hopelessly bad" questions was the close queue, with LQ retooled as a "hopelessly bad" option for answers alone, this would save a lot of busywork.
But I'm not convinced this goes far enough. The VLQ flag on answers shouldn't exist, either, because it is redundant with the "not an answer" (NAA) flag. Anything that can sensibly be flagged as "very low quality" is also "not an answer". If it's of such low quality that it cannot be salvaged and needs to be deleted, then it isn't an answer to the question by our standards. That includes gibberish, "the answer is over here" (which people often mistakenly and/or confusingly call "link-only"), attempts to comment, and attempts to ask questions. The only thing that might be included in VLQ but excluded from NAA are hopelessly wrong answers, but the official guidance already explicitly says not to use VLQ flags to indicate wrong answers and this is one of the canned decline reasons.
In reality, both the VLQ and NAA flags on answers just mean "garbage that needs to be deleted" (aka "unsalvageable"). That's how they are processed by the community and by moderators, so that's what the flag name and text should indicate. There's no need for a distinction, not only because it's confusing and redundant, but also because it wastes everyone's time lawyering about the distinction itself. For answers, VLQ and NAA should be merged into a single flag type. Maybe that flag should continue to be called "not an answer". Maybe it should be called "unsalvageable", or maybe "needs to be deleted". I don't particularly care which one is used, and bikeshedding about the precise choice of language is largely a waste of time. We just need to pick one and make the change. This has been proposed before. In fact, it gets proposed about every 2 years. It's been 2 years since the last time it was proposed, so it's on my to-do list to propose it again. Maybe Team DAG will have some time in-between rolling out Jobs feature notifications and removing the numbers from the review queue drop-down.