I just revisited an answer that was edited and noticed an empty flag overlay where information about pending flags is normally displayed. This was, of course, a new "not an answer" or "very low quality" flag that was currently being hidden from me. Except the answer was both an attempt to answer the question and of acceptable quality, so my first instinct was to decline the flag, whichever it was. Which, of course, I couldn't, even though I was staring right at the very answer that was flagged.
I could, however, dispute the flag by visiting the post's moderator-only timeline and completing the Low Quality Posts review associated with it. It was a "not an answer" flag that was being incorrectly used to indicate a wrong answer, and the answer was terse enough — even more so after the author edit that appeared within 10 seconds of the flag — that I didn't trust reviewers not to vet it as "very low quality" subject to deletion.
Given that
- the goal of hiding NAA/VLQ flags is simply to declutter the queue; and
- the flag overlay has never been changed to not display hidden NAA/VLQ flags anyway, intentionally or not
... can I be allowed to handle the flag (and invalidate the review) when I'm looking directly at the post that was flagged?
This would have the added benefit of allowing me to communicate directly with the flagger (without leaving a public comment, pinging them in chat, or sending a mod message), something you can't do with review since most flaggers never know about the review tasks brought about by their flags and flag disputes don't usually come with a message.