Yes, one letter edits can be important, but there is a very good reason for the 6-character limit. It prevents too many minor edits from new users who may not understand that every edit bumps the post back to the front page.
Users watch the front page looking for good questions to answer. A lot of questions get posted every minute, and finding a good question between all these posts is very difficult. On top of that, if many posts get old posts get bumped due to minor edits and flood the active tab, then the searching for questions to answer becomes even harder.
If you bump a post, make sure you fix all the issues. If it's a one character edit, you can consider leaving a comment under the post for the OP indicating that there is a typo.
On sites where I don't have full edit privileges, I generally follow the same. I leave a comment for the OP indicating the typo, so that when they edit the post, they can incorporate my suggestion and fix the one-character. Till now, I have always received positive response, as they generally fix it, and I remove my comment once it's fixed.
<
was present where a>
was clearly intended. I suggested an edit and added text "(Please remove this line)" (stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/969417) which was rejected. Probably looked like vandalism; e.g. if the reviewers didn't notice<
changed to>
. So I added an explanation following the "Please remove" line (stackoverflow.com/review/suggested-edits/969529). That was accepted. In retrospect, I could have backticked things in the post, but the intent of the edit was to fix the error.