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I think my family and friends in Britain have been blest  greatly with a triumvirate at the head of your Ordinariate in Britain.   While one must necessarily be appointed to make the final decisions,  having a council of three at the top is a far better situation than  having one leader in isolation.  Even if in Britain this is more ad hoc than a canonical structure, I would hope this sort of triumvirate  model would become the norm for the Ordinariates.  Msgr. Newton has shown great, great  wisdom through it.
Of course, it would be different in North  America and in Australia.  My family and friends in Australia might  imagine the Ordinary being named and then two others raised up (as  Monsignore of the Protonotary Apostolic or something like it) who would  perhaps be former bishops in TAC, the Australian Anglican Church or  former priests of the same.  It would be incredibly wise to create from  the marvellous incoming Church in Torres Strait such a Monsignor to serve in this triumvirate.
In North America it would make sense to create such a triumvirate  under Msgr. Steenson as well.  The territory is vast, and the  Ordinariate is not the only expression of the Anglican Patrimony in the  Catholic Church in North America.  By way of example,  a former Anglican  Catholic bishop in Canada would make an excellent choice as another  Monsignor with oversight for the Canadian deanery.  And it would be  prudent and very wise to make the senior pastor of the Pastoral  Provision parishes also a Monsignor with similar oversight  responsibilities among those in the Pastoral Provision but serving in  concert with his brother in Canada and together with Msgr Steenson's  leadership of the Ordinariate.  
I offer these thoughts to my family and friends who are far more  influential than I.  No one seems much interested in what a lay hermit  in Texas thinks of these things.  So I entrust the ideas to you if they  are worthy.  The one thing that has become clear to me is that a single  Ordinary with a Vicar General and an office assitant is an irreduceable  minimum that should have been given more provisions for the journey by  Rome.  It is too small an organisational model to be effective with  so great a missionary task.
I know some will say, But look here! In North America, the Ordinary has  got health insurance for us this May.  And look at all of the men being  ordained through the training programme he developed.  I am in no way  trying to take away from these stellar achievements.  One should applaud  the Ordinary right heartily for being willing to take up a task where  Rome provided no money and the USCCB offered no immediate help with  Insurance from the get go.  We see that as an historian and a scholar he  is absolutely the right person for all of these tasks at the onset.   There are other considerations though where he would be well served to  have brothers --a Msgr. 'Canada' and a Msgr. 'Pastoral Provision' with which to work in this common mission.
What has developed in England from Msgr. Newton's excellent leadership and  vision is clearly a model worth repeating.  And it really is worth repeating everywhere an Ordinariate  is established or where there might be a mixed situation like that in  North America ... say in India for example.  My family in India have  some very clear thoughts about these things, but sadly... and it is sad  that this is the case across the board, there is only the most limited  collaboration with the Laity in Christ of the Anglican Patrimony, a  matter that should be corrected post haste.  Bishops and priests don't  make the Church.  Jesus Christ and all of His Faithful make the Church.
+Laudetur Jesus Christus
