It's a shame of the amount of posts that require editing. First point of call would be to educate the author so they do it themselves and do it right. Links to How to Ask, MCVE and to the Tour page are helpful to new users. The opinion I take is, if they can be bothered to read these links, make the recommended changes then they'll get the help. If they don't people should avoid the question. No effort from them equals no effort from us.
What I call pointless edits
As a reviewer you often see edits that are pointless. By pointless I mean changing I am to I'm. This should not be happening and it's those kinds of suggestions we don't want to see. For this, we need to educate people but I fear this is a losing battle. There are always new users wanting to make similar pointless edits.
Editing off-topic posts
This happens quite often. A post comes on looking something like this:
[enter image description here][x]
I have code that shows error. What happening? this is URGENT!!!!
Let's say hypothetically, this post is from a new user asking us to look at some code which they have yet to post. They have included the error as a screenshot.
There are edits that can be made. The question is, should they be made? I don't think they should be made. This post is off-topic under:
Questions seeking debugging help ("why isn't this code working?") must include the desired behavior, a specific problem or error and the shortest code necessary to reproduce it in the question itself. Questions without a clear problem statement are not useful to other readers. See: How to create a Minimal, Complete, and Verifiable example.
Again we need to educate. You could however restrict suggested edits being made on posts that have been closed leaving it to those with full edit privileges.
I've probably made edits to such posts when I was new. You start to become accustomed to how things work by watching others. Now I would leave a comment telling the OP to visit the Help Center (providing links) and I'd flag the post.
Retagging
There are small changes which also end up in the queue. Something as simple as retagging. This can be important to the question. A simple miss-tag can often lead to a question being heavily down voted. They end up in the same queue as suggested edits and can take a while to be processed. A quicker way would be to introduce a queue primarily for retagging which is open to 2k+ users. You could take it further to only allow people with experience in the tag (badges would show this) but I think that would be too restrictive. Is it worth the development time? I'm unsure but it's an idea.