I seem to be noticing a trend recently that some questions may be getting closed more slowly, or not all.
See css attribute selector not working on a tag. This is a pure typo ("bacground" instead of "background"). Yet this question has received only one close vote (mine) in 11 hours. At this rate, it will probably stay open forever.
Is it possible that folks who once would click through to such a question and spend a minute figuring out that it was a typo and close it as such are simply suffering from low-quality question fatigue, and not even bothering?
On one "answer" to this (or maybe it was a different) question where I commented that this was a good candidate for a "typo" close vote, the answerer responded that he wasn't even aware of that close reason. Perhaps the problem is that the "non-repro/typo" reason is buried under "off-topic". Would it possibly be useful to "promote" the "non-repro/typo" reason to the top level so it is more visible, at the same level as "too broad" etc.?
I'd hammer such questions as a dup of some canonical question about "my CSS is not working" due to misspelled property names or invalid property values, giving suggested ways to track down such problems, but don't have a gold badge in CSS.