For *any* of these closed questions, the OP has the option to edit the post. This will submit the question to the Reopen Review Queue, where community members can (if they so desire) judge the validity of the *original* closure (edit history and close reasons are always available, even if not *fully* shown in the review itself), and cast reopen votes if they feel that either the *original* question, or the edited/improved version is worthy of such action.

Users with 3K+ reputation can also cast reopen votes on any such closed posts, if they so desire - so there is, IMHO, plenty of scope for *potential* corrective action, if the said Moderator has been lax or sloppy.

For what it's worth, I do a lot of Reopen reviews (typically, 40 per day, each day, for the past few months). Since this recent spell of "heavy-duty" closures, I have certainly noticed **many** posts appearing therein that were close by this Moderator: I have yet to come across one that I have felt to have been a poor decision (although I *have* skipped a number, as I regularly do for questions outside of my knowledge-belt).

So, in summary, I don't think there are any issues in this *specific* case, but I do (partly) share your concerns over possible "burn-out" for the reviewer.