This is up from about a week ago where it was around 20 posts.
The issue is: much of the stuff in the queue should not be in there. (Questions that should be closed as 'unclear' or 'minimal example', answers that should be downvoted but not deleted...)
If the LQ queue just becomes another queue for close votes then it is much less useful. It's mainly useful to identify gibberish and dispose of it quickly. As soon as there are 100 posts in there, I don't have time to actually go through it.
Maybe this is not a trend, just a blip, but this is an unusually large amount of LQ flags.
Note that the misuse I've perceived here is both by flaggers as well as reviewers. Just for example https://stackoverflow.com/a/27100532 (now deleted):
While I might feel personally satisfied when an answer I thought to myself was crap gets deleted, from what I have read, I really don't think this should have entered the queue. I basically thought this queue existed so we could delete gibberish and offensive links. (Both of which I have seen in the queue.)
I thought that the answer pictured should just get downvoted a lot, not deleted by us. Same thing with answers that contain a link but are not just a link. (Though we have been over the link-only thing many, many times.)
Also, there have been quite a few questions on meta lately about audits and such involving this queue so there appears to be some confusion surrounding its purpose. Also, I think the queue may be itself confused about its own purpose.
- Does something need to be done about this?
- What can be done about this?
At the very least, I think question closing should really, really not be a part of the LQ queue workflow. We already have a queue for that.
If this is indeed a trend, some other solutions I can think of are:
- The review option 'Looks OK' prompts for a reason, similar to rejecting an edit, which the flagger receives.
- Splitting the queue to two or more queues so these different purposes don't interfere with each other.