Thank you for reposting over here.
I'm not really sure what you were expecting to see. But, having said that, I'm not even sure that your objective is a worthwhile investment of your time.
The whole idea of Slack is determine which tasks/deliverables are on the Critical Path and to then focus on those tasks since their delay will impact the overall project schedule completion.
In addition, by accurately tracking task Actual Start and Actual Finish, as well as adjusting the estimated Durations of active tasks (to reflect revised Finish dates), you'll see that the Critical path is dynamic and tasks that previously were on it may be dropped and tasks that previously weren't on it are now shown.
When it comes to resource leveling then, again, you really don't want to focus too much on Slack but, rather, on the actual tasks themselves. If you have an overloaded resource then you need to see if the tasks where the overload occurs are on the critical path. If the tasks aren't on the critical path then you *might* want to consider increasing the duration of one (or more) of those tasks -- but if they're not on the critical path and your resource has given you reasonable estimates and the overallocation is reasonable then you probably don't have to worry about these tasks.
Alternatively, (if the tasks are on the critical path) consider if those tasks shouldn't be done by two different resources (to attempt to maintain the originally scheduled project completion) or, alternatively, have those deliverables done sequentially rather than in parallel so that the original resource (the "correct" resource since he/she is best suited to provide the deliverable) is still assigned and the schedule reflects the reality of predecessors/successors. This may very well extend the project duration and may (will!) impact the tasks flagged as being on the Critical path.
Finally, as I harp on about constantly: your schedule is only as good as your estimates. Depending on the industry and project deliverables, your estimates may be no more than +/- 50% accurate. If that's the case then your time is going to be best spent carefully tracking actual progress, revised Work and revised Finish dates. As you update those, then go back to your Critical Path to see which tasks are now on it ... and watch those like a hawk!