What do you mean? I didn't think that denominations which call their ministers "priests" had any requirement that someone becoming a priest must have their feet washed by a bishop.
Note that the word Priest is an Anglicization of the Greek word Presbyter, which means Elder. Various early English translations of the Bible used the word to translate “sacerdos” “hierus” and “kohen” referring to the celebrants of the Pagan rites and to the Jewish Kohanim, the Levitical hierarchs that began with St. Aaron, while the hieratic king St. Melchizedek is explicitly declared a typological prophecy of Christ in Hebrews (he may also have been Christ himself, but whether the appearance of Melchizedek was a Christophany, or merely a holy man whose actions anticpated those of Christ by virtue of his hieratic royalty, is uncertain and a point of some debate as I am sure you are aware).
Thus the word priest, when used by a denomination, should be assumed to mean Presbyter, that is to say, Elder, unless that denomination makes other statements that imply a distinct sacerdotal character, which the Roman Catholics have to some extent, which is perhaps why our interlocutor keeps making posts about what would facilitate female priests, without regard to the fact that there already exist many denominations, such as the Old Catholic denominations in the Union of Utrecht, the more liberal examples of Anglican* churches that ordain women and do other things that are contrary to the Roman Catholic faith as presently defined. And changing the position of the RCC on women priests would cause a schism, and schisms are inherently wrong.
*Excluding the Continuing Anglo-Catholic churches in the US, who my beloved friend
@prodromos might not be fully aware of, but many of them enumerate seven sacraments, and all of them are extremely traditional in terms of not ordaining women and so on, and my view is that the Orthodox ought to be actively courting them; indeed I myself am trying to persuade one dying Continuing Anglo Catholic church to join the Antiochian Western Rite Vicarate as a means of revitalizing itself - in Australia the closest thing ot these Continuing Anglo Catholic churches is probably the Antiochian Western Rite, since the Anglo Catholic parishes in the Archdiocese of Sydney are theologically liberal, albeit restrained in their exercise of that liberalism, whereas the Continuing Anglo Catholics in the US are theologically traditional and unconstrained in their pursuit of tradition. In the case of the diocese I am conversing with, the leadership already has personal connections to Eastern Orthodoxy and Oriental Orthodoxy in that the elderly bishop married an Armenian Orthodox lady who sadly reposed, may her memory be eternal, and his son who is one of the presbyters married a Romanian Orthodox lady,, neither woman converting to the Anglican church, and so both men have attended and greatly enjoyed Orthodox liturgies. Additionally the coadjutor bishop is really interested in the Eastern liturgical traditions.