# Alternative fix: Use calendar folder permissions (delegate access) # This bypasses the sharing policy entirely # Connect to Exchange Online Connect-ExchangeOnline # Grant Leeann permission to Jim's calendar directly Write-Host "`n=== Granting Calendar Permissions ===" -ForegroundColor Cyan # Option 1: Reviewer access (read-only, see all details) Add-MailboxFolderPermission -Identity "jim@jparkinsonaz.com:\Calendar" -User "leeann@lamaddux.com" -AccessRights Reviewer # Option 2: Editor access (read + create/edit items) - uncomment if needed # Add-MailboxFolderPermission -Identity "jim@jparkinsonaz.com:\Calendar" -User "leeann@lamaddux.com" -AccessRights Editor Write-Host "`nCalendar permissions granted successfully." -ForegroundColor Green # Verify the permissions Write-Host "`n=== Current Calendar Permissions ===" -ForegroundColor Cyan Get-MailboxFolderPermission -Identity "jim@jparkinsonaz.com:\Calendar" | Format-Table User, AccessRights Write-Host "`n=== Next Steps ===" -ForegroundColor Yellow Write-Host "1. Leeann should open Outlook" Write-Host "2. Go to File > Account Settings > Account Settings > Internet Calendars" Write-Host "3. Or in Outlook: Add Calendar > From Address Book > select Jim Parkinson" Write-Host "4. Jim's calendar will appear in her calendar list" Write-Host "" Write-Host "NOTE: This uses delegate permissions, not 'sharing' - bypasses the policy restriction."