Regarding this question
When OP doesn't ask for a tool or library etc., and it seems reasonable to expect a priori (i.e., for someone who doesn't already know the answer) that a tool wouldn't be required (e.g., because it should be a short piece of code or something provided by the standard library), the "seeking tools" close reason is generally not applicable. Carefully check the question for other closure reasons (especially "needs more focus"), and leave it open if it doesn't qualify to be closed. Sometimes a slight bit of interpretation is needed, and the close reasons aren't necessarily factored optimally, but overall they are a very accurate guide to what makes a useful question that merits an answer and which would benefit the site.
Regarding bad questions generally
If you see something that should be closed, vote to close it. If you see something that should be downvoted, downvote it. It's a shame if the SG failed to filter something - but in the long run, the SG will successfully filter a lot. It's not your fault if you see something get through that shouldn't have - when you take normal curation actions, you're doing your self-assigned duty as a curator, and helping improve the site. The fault (assuming a consensus that your judgment is correct) lies with the person who approved the question in SG.
Improving the system
It'd be kinda nice if SG questions couldn't be unilaterally approved by anyone (which seems to be how it currently works). But so far, we don't have the resources to make it feasible any other way. There's still discourse about whether we can accept questions sitting around for however long and simply not getting reviewed by anyone. (Although to my understanding, the system is supposed to scale the fraction of questions sent to SG to try and avoid this.)
More importantly, I agree that the system should have something in place to discourage users from approving SG questions that shouldn't be approved. Ideally, it would reward all correct SG actions (as based on consensus), and penalize (in the broadest sense) all incorrect SG actions (but especially approving something that shouldn't be, or voting as off topic when the question meets standards, or hammering as a clearly wrong duplicate).
These might be hard to distinguish overall, but I think we can pick the low hanging fruit to start - and we don't need audits to make this work. All we need is to track how questions fare after being published, and in some way associate those scores with the approving users. A simple reputation share is unlikely to be good enough, but a system similar to the Q-ban algorithm could be used to suspend users from SG reviews if they approve too many questions that go on to be downvoted and/or closed. But this is completely off the top of my head, so it's not ready for a feature-request yet.
And, yes, there should also be onboarding. But that's just part of a general onboarding problem. If you have users who have been here for 10 years and can't figure out their way around the SG or accurately mark issues with questions - that's almost certainly not because the SG interface needs work (although it certainly could be improved) - it's because those users have been here for 10 years and never been forced to understand our standards for questions.