Many real-world applications require surfacing extracted snippets to users, whether motivated by assistive tools for literature surveys or document cross-referencing, or needs to mitigate and recover from model generated inaccuracies., Yet, these passages can be difficult to consume when divorced from their original document context. In this work, we explore the limits of LLMs to perform decontextualization of document snippets in user-facing scenarios, focusing on two real-world settings - question answering and citation context previews for scientific documents. We propose a question-answering framework for decontextualization that allows for better handling of user information needs and preferences when determining the scope of rewriting. We present results showing state-of-the-art LLMs under our framework remain competitive with end-to-end approaches. We also explore incorporating user preferences into the system, finding our framework allows for controllability.