So, basically nothing whatsoever has been done and you have no contact at all with anyone who is able to move the process forward within the Order of Preachers or at the Diocesan level. In addition, you have no canonical standing of any kind and no permission to even seek such standing. The only things you do have are a website where claims or at the least insinuations are made regarding affiliation with the Order of Preachers thought use of the Dominican name and the shield, both with no permission to do so.
I think that pretty much sums it up.
“Getting a bishop’s permission to start a community” went out when the new Code of Canon Law was promulgated in 1983. The new CCL recognized the right of the faithful to assemble, and if a new community comes of it, so be it.
There are two Dominican contemplative communities who have to meet certain criteria before they are aggregated into the Order, but they still wear the habit, and still call themselves Dominicans. Those are Lockport and Mt Tabor, respectively.
Fr. Gambari, the “guru” of new foundations, has written a number of books on the process of founding charisms. He says that the groups wishing aggregation with an established order have to meet that order’s criteria for such. But that will be waaay down the road for any group that is founded even today at this moment. (20 years or more).
About the only thing anyone in the order can do is tell people that someone is acting as contact point and resource assembler at x site, and for more information email them at the email address given.
The aspirants themselves–known as a preparatory association–have to live the life before anything can be done at any level, or ‘move the process forward’ as you put it. They are designated as both lay association and preparatory association at that stage, and they are permitted distinctive garb outside the house/convent. They are also permitted to take religious names.
When they get a working set of constitutions, THEN they go to the bishop to ask for recognition as a community. This is known as being constituted a Private Association of Christ’s Faithful with the Intention of Becoming an Institute of Religious Life. The bishop will give them a letter of recognition.
They stay at this level for a number of years–Fr. Gambari and the IRL both say to give all levels of the process at least five years. The community has to grow and receive postulants. When they have persevered with formation and reception of new members, they can be raised to Public Association, and are able to make new foundations (establish convents in other cities). After 10 years of steady growth, they become Diocesan Right. After 25 years, they are raised to Pontifical Right.
So, yes your summary was correct. We have a webpage advertising the fact that someone cares enough about the world to try to resurrect a visiting nurse charism that was beloved in the Church.
We have also developed a website (still very much under construction) promoting nursing orders in the US:
cloisters.tripod.com/us_nursing/ This site was built in response to watching congregations merge with each other, and our great healthcare systems being sold to seculars.
Blessings,
Cloisters