What are the responsibilities and job description for the Volunteer: Microsoft 365 & Power Platform Integration position at Army Pink - Pathway To Freedom?
This is a volunteer opportunity provided by Taproot Foundation, a nonprofit creating social change through pro bono connections.
We are looking for a volunteer who can design and configure a secure Microsoft 365 operational environment. This enviroment will include Teams, SharePoint, OneDrive, and Azure AD/Entra ID. Then, the volunteer will build Power Platform automations to handle ride workflows, and support middleware integration to pass Lyft Concierge events into Salesforce and trigger Twilio messaging.
Volunteers will help build the secure technical backbone that enables near-real-time safe rides and timely, private messaging for survivors. This work directly supports Army Pink’s mission to make escape possible, protect survivor privacy, and connect people to critical follow-up resources.
The volunteer will collaborate remotely with project leads and stakeholders, using provided compliance requirements (including VAWA guidance) to iterate on configurations and automations. Access, timelines, and implementation details will be shared during interviews to ensure smooth handoff and adoption.
Army Pink Mission: Army Pink: Pathway to Freedom is a survivor-led initiative that makes escape possible — by funding the very first step: a safe ride out. We turn compassion into action by helping survivors of domestic abuse leave danger and begin again with dignity, support, and a path toward healing. Because no one should be left behind when they’re ready to leave. We provide safe rides for survivors who need a way out of dangerous situations. We also connect survivors with meaningful support through trusted partners who offer mental health care, education, wellness, and long-term recovery resources. As a fiscally sponsored initiative under Charity On Top (a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit), we ensure donations are tax-deductible and used responsibly to support ride access and survivor safety. We stay committed to each survivor’s path forward, because leaving abuse isn’t just about getting out — it’s about rebuilding a life with a safe way forward and hope. 💗 Leaving an abusive situation is the most dangerous moment for a survivor. Many face barriers that make escaping even harder — no safe transportation, limited support, fear, or not knowing where to turn. Domestic violence organizations consistently report that lack of safe transportation is the number one unmet and severely underfunded need, keeping survivors trapped in dangerous situations. By providing safe rides and connecting survivors to real resources, ARMY PiNK helps make that critical moment safer and gives each survivor the support to move forward and start again. Leaving abuse isn’t just physical — it often leaves the spirit broken. Army Pink curates a healing space designed to calm the nervous system and restore balance. Survivors can access meditation, crystal bowls, movement, and trauma-informed yoga, thoughtfully selected to support recovery and resilience. These resources help survivors reconnect with themselves, soothe stress, and rebuild a sense of safety and wholeness, nurturing the part of them most deeply wounded.
We are looking for a volunteer who can design and configure a secure Microsoft 365 operational environment. This enviroment will include Teams, SharePoint, OneDrive, and Azure AD/Entra ID. Then, the volunteer will build Power Platform automations to handle ride workflows, and support middleware integration to pass Lyft Concierge events into Salesforce and trigger Twilio messaging.
Volunteers will help build the secure technical backbone that enables near-real-time safe rides and timely, private messaging for survivors. This work directly supports Army Pink’s mission to make escape possible, protect survivor privacy, and connect people to critical follow-up resources.
The volunteer will collaborate remotely with project leads and stakeholders, using provided compliance requirements (including VAWA guidance) to iterate on configurations and automations. Access, timelines, and implementation details will be shared during interviews to ensure smooth handoff and adoption.
Army Pink Mission: Army Pink: Pathway to Freedom is a survivor-led initiative that makes escape possible — by funding the very first step: a safe ride out. We turn compassion into action by helping survivors of domestic abuse leave danger and begin again with dignity, support, and a path toward healing. Because no one should be left behind when they’re ready to leave. We provide safe rides for survivors who need a way out of dangerous situations. We also connect survivors with meaningful support through trusted partners who offer mental health care, education, wellness, and long-term recovery resources. As a fiscally sponsored initiative under Charity On Top (a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit), we ensure donations are tax-deductible and used responsibly to support ride access and survivor safety. We stay committed to each survivor’s path forward, because leaving abuse isn’t just about getting out — it’s about rebuilding a life with a safe way forward and hope. 💗 Leaving an abusive situation is the most dangerous moment for a survivor. Many face barriers that make escaping even harder — no safe transportation, limited support, fear, or not knowing where to turn. Domestic violence organizations consistently report that lack of safe transportation is the number one unmet and severely underfunded need, keeping survivors trapped in dangerous situations. By providing safe rides and connecting survivors to real resources, ARMY PiNK helps make that critical moment safer and gives each survivor the support to move forward and start again. Leaving abuse isn’t just physical — it often leaves the spirit broken. Army Pink curates a healing space designed to calm the nervous system and restore balance. Survivors can access meditation, crystal bowls, movement, and trauma-informed yoga, thoughtfully selected to support recovery and resilience. These resources help survivors reconnect with themselves, soothe stress, and rebuild a sense of safety and wholeness, nurturing the part of them most deeply wounded.