[bluefeet's been doing a bit of analysis and soul-searching with regard to the Very Low Quality flag lately][1]:

> When flagging questions as VLQ, we're inadvertently sending too much noise to the moderators to handle.

...

> **Problem 1:** Currently, when a question is older than 7 days and it receives a VLQ flag it bypasses Triage and goes directly to the moderators.

There are a few ways we could've solved this particular problem, but the truth is that very few VLQ flags ever get raised on posts over 7 days old... Heck, 87% of all VLQ flags are raised on questions less than *one* day old. The vast, vast majority of the worst cruft gets cleaned up quickly... 

...and when it doesn't, there's often something else going on:

- **Spelling or grammar problems** aren't great, but a question that's been sitting around, answered, *for months or years*, is probably good enough to be understood. Editing to fix the problems or simply downvoting will suffice.

- Extremely short or **link-only answers** are often of extremely poor quality, but those that've survived for years are usually at least understandable; their greatest flaws tend to be in not actually answering the question, for which there exists another flag (one used far, far more often already). 

- And then there are the thousands of terrible questions with no answers that **no one has ever bothered to look at**. Most of these will be automatically deleted sooner or later anyway; a flag doesn't really help much. A downvote will speed things along a bit though.

So as of about 24 hours ago, the VLQ flag is no longer available on posts older than 7 days (the precise value may change, but 7 seems reasonable). We'll be monitoring flags (especially NAA and "Other") to ensure this doesn't cause problems; feel free to voice any concerns here on meta as well.

Kudos to [Michael Stum][2] for implementing this change - also, please join me in welcoming him to the core development team!


  [1]: https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/323945/fixing-the-disconnect-between-vlq-and-triage
  [2]: http://stackoverflow.com/users/91/michael-stum