Your parishioners are fortunate to benefit from your ministry. Your internet insights are useful. In my diocese the SSPX chapel began in the 1970s when liturgical and catechetical abuses were far more common than now, though I still find them. Today we have 2 parishes with TLMs, newer priests seem orthodox, diocesan ministries are usually, not always, helpful. The diocese itself seems to be standing almost alone against the secular onslaught, as the Media tries to divide and conquer Catholics.
The SSPX chapel seems to be remaining “on an island”, where it is still 1975. (The websites reinforce the urgency to remain on that island). The people and priest don’t directly benefit from our local ordinary, or from the many diocesan ministries that are now mostly orthodox, for Catholic families and children. The SSPX people favor prolife and religious liberty. But I haven’t knowingly met any of them at diocesan programs, and they aren’t strong enough to have their own program.
Children growing up in SSPX may be insulated from a few bad things, but also from lots of good Catholic things in most regions. If their chapel closes, or if they move away, will they seek out reliable Catholic ministry under the authority of the bishop-ordinary? Or will they be influenced by an upbringing skeptical towards the bishop-ordinary- susceptible to “divide and conquer”?
I think the Church wants to reach out to families “on an island”, including extending the sacrament of Confession. But that doesn’t mean it is preferable for families to remain on the island, even though the websites teach that, and likely always will teach that. Instead of constantly posting about whether the SSPX is, or is not, “schismatic”, consider the isolation of families. Everything that happens, whether the pope does something disagreeable, or even when he does something like extend faculties for Confession, will be used by the websites as one more reason for families to remain on the island…just a little longer…